Action to enjoin defendant from using a right of way.
The facts may be more easily understood by reference to the diagram on page 306.
In 1866 John L. Merriam owned lots 6, 7 and 8, block 23, St. Paul Proper. These lots are each 50 x 150 feet, fronting on Fourth street, and together they form a tract 150 feet square on the southeast corner of Fourth and Wabasha streets. On October 30, 1866, Merriam deeded to one party the north 60 feet, and to another the south 25 feet, of the south 85 feet of the west 38 feet of lot 6. Both deeds conveyed also “a perpetual right of way over and upon a strip of land on the easterly side of said lot 6, 12 feet wide through the whole length of said lot 6, for the purposes of ingress and egress, to and from said described portion of said lot 6, and as appurtenant thereto.” By 1881 such conveyances had been made that the north 65 feet of lot 6 was owned by Merriam and William F. Davidson in equal undivided shares. On September 13, 1881, William F. Davidson and wife deeded to Merriam the undivided one-half of the north 65 feet of lot 6, with the following exception: “Excepting and reserving to said parties of the first part as the owners of the southerly 85 feet of said lots 6, 7 and 8
In 1882, Davidson commenced the erection of the Grand Opera House, covering the south 85 feet of lot 6 and also of lot 5 and the west one-half of lot 4.
On June 21, 1883, Merriam leased to Davidson for 25 years the east 29^ feet of the north 65 feet of lot 6. This lease contains this clause:
“Subject to the exception and reservation to said William F. Davidson, contained in a certain deed from him and his wife to said party of the first part dated September 13, 1881. * * * whereby a right of way over a strip of ground twelve (12) feet wide along the easterly side of said lot six (6) is reserved to said second party * * * as the owner of the southerly eighty-five (85) feet of lot six (6) seven (7) and eight (8) of said block * * *.” and also this clause:
“It is further agreed that nothing in this contract shall be construed as in any manner changing or vacating the said right of way over a strip twelve (12) feet wide, along the easterly side of said lot six (6) saved and reserved in and by said deed of September 13, 1881, hereinbefore described save and except as such right of way may be temporarily affected during the term hereby granted, and by virtue of this agreement.”
The walls of the opera house were then up and reference is made to it in that Davidson was permitted to construct an iron stairway and fire escape leading from the gallery and second floor of the opera house building to a platform on this 29-|“foot strip. There was no entrance to the opera house from the 12-foot right of way or from the leased strip save the stairway and fire escape above referred to.
In 1889 the opera house was burned, leaving, however, the walls standing. The building was not rebuilt as an opera house. In 1908 Watson P. Davidson, who had by mesne conveyances acquired the title of William F. Davidson to the opera house property and also to the right of way, leased the same to the defendant for a storage warehouse. In 1908 defendant erected a warehouse four
In tbe meantime- the Merriam title to tbe north 65 feet of lot 6 had passed to the Merriam Realty Co., and in 1911 that company deeded it to plaintiff and with it also the north 65 feet of lots 7 and 8. During 1911, plaintiff built on this tract the Commerce Building, 12 stories high. In constructing this building he left a driveway from Fourth street to defendant’s warehouse nearly coincident with the right of way in question. This driveway was arched to the height of one story, and above the first story the Commerce Building was built and extended over it. The driveway thus left, varied from the right of way in question in this: Five two foot columns supporting the arch and the building above it were built on the easterly side of the 12-foot strip, and to offset this encroachment plaintiff widened the strip nearly two feet on the westerly side by setting the building that distance in upon his land.
In 1912 plaintiff commenced this action and asked judgment that defendant be excluded forever from the 12-foot passway and enjoined from using tbe same in any manner or for any purpose. The trial court did not sustain this contention, but held that the passway must be limited in its use to access to and from lot 6, and ordered judgment enjoining the uSe of it altogether until defendant shall divide its building and erect a solid wall without openings therein on the line between lots 5 and 6.
One of the contentions of plaintiff is that defendant’s right of way rests solely on the deeds given by Merriam in 1866, which deeds created an easement of right of way over a 12-foot strip running through the whole length of lot 6. It is claimed that the use of the southerly end of this strip for any other purpose than a way is unwarranted and “deprives him of the right to keep open the rest of the passageway” over plaintiff’s land, or at least that it imposes an additional burden on the passageway over plaintiff’s land, which should be enjoined. We think it clear that defendant’s rights do not rest on the 1866 deeds, but that the later reservations in the deed from Davidson to Merriam made in 1881 superseded the .grants in the earlier deeds. The 1881 deed reserved to Davidson, as owner
This is the only right of way with which the parties to that transaction were thereafter concerned, and the only one which concerns the parties to this action. We need not consider what the situation would have been if the deed of 1881 had not been given.
Coming then to the facts of this case, we must construe this 1881 deed in connection with the lease in 1883, which confirms this easement, and construe both in connection with attendant circumstances, for when the extent of the easement is not clearly declared the intent of the parties will be determined by the relation of the easement to the land to which it is appurtenant, and other circumstances surrounding the transaction, including the conduct and the practical construction of the contract by the parties. Winston v. Johnson, 42 Minn. 398, 45 N. W. 958; Lidgerding v. Zignego, 77 Minn. 421, 80 N. W. 360; 77 Am. St. 677.
The conduct of later owners, including plaintiff, shows a practical construction of these instruments and leaves no doubt as to their own view of the rights of defendant. At the time the storage warehouse was built the Merriam Eealty Co. was the owner in fee of the 12-foot strip. The warehouse was built with its entrance on the strip with the manifest purpose of using the right of way over it as a means of access from Fourth street. Yet the Merriam Eealty Co. voiced no word of protest either during the construction of the building or during the years thereafter during which this entrance to the warehouse was used. The deed by which the Merriam Eealty Co. conveyed to plaintiff the northerly part of lots 6, 7 and 8, including this strip, excepted this same right of way. It referred to it as reserved or granted by the 1866 deed, but this is not of great importance. It did except it. After plaintiff acquired the property and planned the construction of his 12-story office building, he wrote defendant, “I shall, however, leave a passageway over the easterly 12 feet of the northerly 65 feet of said lot 6, sufficient to answer all the purposes of a right of way to that part of lot 6 which is in the rear of the northerly 65 feet thereof,” and he did do so. He entered into negotiations, for the most part fruitless it is true, predicated on the assumption that defendant had a subsisting right of way, and looking toward the adjustment of some small controversies between the parties. He paved this right of way from Fourth street to the entrance to the warehouse with concrete, and he himself habitually passed over it and through defendant’s warehouse to the rear of his 12-story building. The recognition of the existence of this right of way as a means of access between Fourth street and the warehouse was decisive and beyond question. Our construction •of these instruments is in accordance with the construction placed mpon them by the parties concerned, and we hold that defendant has a right of way over this 12-foot strip from Fourth street to its building, and 'the whole thereof.
Order reversed and new trial granted.
On December 21, 1914, the following opinion was filed:
Appeal from the clerk’s taxation of costs. The clerk taxed against respondent the full cost of printing the record, at sixty cents a page. The propriety of this action is the principal question raised on this appeal. This case was tried in the trial court with the case of Davidson v. Kretz, infra, p. 313, and the appeal of Davidson in that case and
