76 P. 641 | Or. | 1904
after stating the facts in the
foregoing terms, delivered the opinion of the court.
“Sh. D. Brown & Peninsular R. E. Co. have this day delivered to Portland University Co. deed for land in Melvin, Ballantyne Street in said tract is to be moved as agreed upon. This is part of consideration.”
He testifies that the secretary then said to him “that the original agreement should be carried out”; that the highway mentioned in the agreement, from the end of Ballantyne Street as it was agreed to be relocated to Spaulding Street, was opened nearly to the head of Olin Street immediately after the deeds were executed and work was begun on the university building, and was used by plaintiffs and every one for five or six years; that the grounds were all cleared off, the highway being well graded, but that a fence and gateway were put in some two or three years ago, the recollection of witnesses being indistinct as to the time of their construction. Mr. Robert C. Houston testifies that he was over the ground about a month before he was called as a witness, and that there were some indications of an old road leading from the gate near Olin Street along the top of the bluff in front of and beyond the university building.
D. C. Hoyt says that he has known the premises since 1881; that Mock formerly had a wood road immediately in front of where the university building now stands; that it was used by him and other parties desiring to go through that way, and to the present time it is used by people going to and from the building; that it was the only immediate highway that the Portland University people had to their grounds; that for years before the Portland University discontinued the school it put a fence along Spaulding Street, but made no restrictions against any one going
John Mock testifies that he sold the land upon which the building stands to the university, and that he had a wood road, a private way, running along the bluff in front of the building in an early day; and Merriman Houston, that he lived adjoining the university premises for eleven years, that when he first knew them they were all open from Spaulding to Ballantyne Street, and that an old road extended from near the end of Olin Street along the bluff into the grove to the rear of the site of the university building, that the university campus was inclosed in the year 1897 or 1898 and a gateway was put in from Spaulding Street.
P. L. Willis testifies in behalf of the defendants that the Portland University had an option (referring to the agreement of February, 1891) to buy from Brown all his interest in tract 14 lying north of a point sixty feet north of Ballantyne Street; that the agreement was afterward abandoned, and that he deeded to the university the whole of the tract down to Ballantyne Street; that Brown’s idea in holding the remainder of the land was to sell at a large figure, and that from his conversation with Brown the idea of the right of way from Ballantyne Street did not strike him as of much importance, or that Brown placed any importance upon it at all; that the fence along Spaulding Street extended, which has since come to be known
It is quite apparent from a careful survey of this testimony that the Portland University never opened a highway of any kind from the east end of Ballantyne Street, as agreed to be relocated to Spaulding Street. Formerly a wood road ran along the bluff from very near the gateway to, and perhaps beyond, the site of the university building, but this was only used for private purposes while it existed. When, however, the university people assumed control, the premises were wholly enclosed, and a gateway provided at Spaulding Street for entrance to and exit from. the building, and the roadway was never used for general
Mr. Justice Rhodes well indicates the distinction between an easement appurtenant and one in gross in Wagner v. Hanna, 38 Cal. 111, 116 (99 Am. Dec. 354), Avhere he says : “ To the creation of a right of way that amounts to an easement and not merely to a right of way in gross, two tenements are necessary—the dominant, to which the right of way belongs; and the servient, upon which the obligation rests. * * The principal distinction between a right of way in gross and an easement is found in the fact that in the first there is, and in the second there is not, a dominant tenement. The right of way is in gross, and personal to the grantee, because it is not appurtenant to other premises. The owner of premises may grant the right of way in either form, and if it is the intention to grant a
Carrying the logic of the authorities still further, the university did not, by the agreement, even so much as create an easement in gross. Not having an estate in thg land at the time, it was an executory undertaking, wholly collateral to the land, and entirely personal in its portent and bearing. As is indicated by the cases, a person may subject his lands to any servitude, and transmit them to others charged with the same, but he cannot subject those belonging to others to any servitude whatever, and if he covenants respecting them it is an altogether personal undertaking, which does not in any manner affect the lands themselves. So, if a person be the owner when he covenants to burden lands with an easement or a servitude, equity, regarding that as done which ought to be done, will impress the burden upon the property coming into other hands with knowledge of the covenant. It does this because the covenant has been so impressed in the first
But, if it be conceded that plaintiffs have a standing to enforce the agreement by reason of yet having an undivided one-half interest in the title to lots 16 to 20, inclusive, they cannot enforce it as against Zahm, the successor to the university, as it is not shown that he took with notice or knowledge thereof, and the covenant of the university is therefore not binding upon him in any sense. As the agreement affects the tract upon which the university was given an option to purchase, it was such, perhaps, as would have bound the university in equity to grant the easement. The first parties thereby, in effect, reserved the right to have that part of Ballantyne Street from the angle east changed or relocated ; and, if the deed had been made in accordance therewith, it would have amounted to a reservation in the grant, or, as is sometimes construed, a grant by the university, and that would have been the end of the matter so far as that particular tract is concerned, and the easement would have been impressed upon the estate. But the deed was to the whole tract, with a collateral undertaking on the part of the university, if the memorandum of its secretary may be so construed as continuing the original agreement still to relocate the street as stipulated. This undertaking, however, so far as the record discloses, was wholly unknown to Zahm, and he could not be bound by it. Nor did the recording of the original agreement serve to notify him constructively, as,
It follows from these considerations that the decree of the trial court must be reversed, and the complaint dismissed, and it is so ordered. Reversed.