83 Me. 139 | Me. | 1891
This action is for an alleged breach of a covenant against incumbrances in a deed of land. The deed describes the land as bounded on the north by the centre of a town road; and inasmuch as this description renders the fact certain that one half of the width of the road must be on the land conveyed to him, the plaintiff claims that the existence of this road is a
We think this can not be. We think that when the deed itself, by which land is conveyed, describes it as bounded on one side by the centre of a public road, the right of way is impliedly reserved. That such must have been the intention of the parties no one can doubt. The effect of such a description is the same as if so much of the interest in the land as is included in the right of way had been excluded from the conveyance ; and the covenants apply only to the residue of the estate. That is, the interest covered by the incumbrance was not conveyed, and does not purport to have been conveyed, and the covenants do not apply to it.
Thus, in Freeman v. Foster, 55 Maine, 510, where land was conveyed subject to a mortgage, and it was contended that notwithstanding the mortgage was thus mentioned in the deed, it constituted a breach of the covenant against incumbrances, the court held that " the interest covered by the mortgage was not conveyed,” and that the covenant against incumbrances did not apply to that incumbrance.
So, as held in Montgomery v. Reed, 69 Maine, 510; if the land conveyed is described as''flats,” this term alone implies that the public have a right to use the land for the purposes of navigation, and the existence of the right is not a breach of the covenant against inemnbrances.
So, in Prescott v. Williams, 5 Met. 429, where the estate conveyed was described as land through which the water from a mill passed, the court held that the right of the mill owner to enter upon the land and clfeanse the channel of the stream rvas implied, and would not constitute a breach of the covenant against incumbrances.
The principle on which these and many other similar decile ioi s rest is that, when the estate conveyed is so described that| the parties must have understood that it was subject to at
In defining the term cum onere in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, it is said that " a purchaser with knowledge of an incumbrance takes the property cum onere.” And the law seems to be so held in Pennsylvania. In a recent case in that state (Memmert v. McKeen, 112 Pa. St. 315), the court held that one who purchases a house-lot, upon which steps leading into a building Íon the adjoining lot are standing, is presumed to have assented to the price in view of a continuance of the steps upon his land, and will not be allowed to complain of them as the breach of a ✓ covenant against incumbrances. And the law seems to be so held in some other states.
But we do not go so far as that. We do not hold that oral evidence of the grantee’s knowledge is admissible to control the covenants in his deed. But we hold that when land conveyed is bounded by the centre of a public road, and is so described in the grantee's deed, so that knowledge of the fact is brought home to him without resort to oral or other extraneous evidence, he must accept the land cum onere; and will not be allowed to complain of that incumbrance as a breach of the covenants in his deed. To that extent we consider the rule jnst and reasonable and well settled by authority.
Exceptions overruled. Judgment for defendant.