113 Ga. 1002 | Ga. | 1901
Without regard to the question as to whether the instrument under which Hiers claims created an estate for years, .an easement, or a license in Deaton and his assignees, the tram-road which has been constructed upon the land of Wade is, for the term specified in the contract, the property of Hiers, and he is -entitled to the free enjoyment thereof without molestation or hindrance from Wade or any one claiming under him. The conclusion just stated can be properly reached even though the rights of Hiers upon the land of Wade be those of a licensee only. In Cook v. Pridgen, 45 Ga. 339, 340, Judge McCay, after stating that a license even in writing is revocable, says: “ But it does not always' follow that a license is revocable at the will of the party giving the license. Even a temporary license must be considered as intended to continue until the objects of the parties are attained, as where •even in courts of law it has been held that a mere license to overflow land with water, by a dam for a sawmill, can not be revoked during the continuance of the dam; since it may fairly bfe presumed that the parties intended the license to last that long at least.” In Sheffield v. Collier, 3 Ga. 87, Judge Lumpkin says: “Where acts have been done by one party upon the faith of a license given by .another, the latter will be estopped from revoking it to the injury •of the former, and this even if the exercise of the right given by •the license is of a nature to amount to the enjoyment of an easement or other incorporeal hereditament.” In Mayor of Macon v. Franklin, 12 Ga. 243, Judge Nisbet says that even a parol license is not revocable in every case; and that “If the enjoyment of it must he preceded necessarily by the expenditure of money, and the grantee has made improvements or invested capital in consequence of it, it becomes an agreement for a valuable consideration, and he a purchaser for value. In such cases, the books say that it would be against all conscience to permit the grantor to recall the license as soon as the benefit expected from the expenditure is beginning to he derived. Whilst executory, as a general rule it is revocable, but not after it is executed.” See also Rawson v. Bell, 46 Ga. 19; City Council v. Burum, 93 Ga. 74, and cases cited. If the right to revoke a license is taken away by the fact that the licensee has .acted on it and expended money and made improvements upon the faith of the license, much more would the right to revoke be taken away where the license was originally granted upon a valuable consideration moving from the licensee to the licensor.
Judgment on each bill reversed.