The plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment determining whether he has a way of necessity over the lands of the defendants. He owns a parcel of land, known as parcel B, which is landlocked. He claims a way of necessity to a highway, Knight Street, over land known as parcel II, owned by the defendant Norwalk Iron Foundry, Inc., and bordering on parcel B on the west, and land known as parcel J, owned by the defendant Bailwitz and bordering on parcel H on the west. The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment decreeing that the land of the defendants should not be subjected to an easement in favor of the plaintiff’s land.
The plaintiff’s land, parcel B, is 18,654 square feet in area, or about 42 per cent of an acre. It consists
Parcel B was one of five parcels, A, B, C, D and E, acquired by Krusch on May 1, 1922. It was contiguous to parcels A and C, each of which bordered on the west on Knight Street, so that there was access from B to Knight Street through either A or C. Parcel C was sold in 1924. Another parcel, F, acquired by Krusch in July, 1923, was contiguous to A and bordered on the north on North Avenue, so that there was access from B to North Avenue by crossing A and F. The layout of all the parcels is shown on the accompanying sketch.
The question is whether the plaintiff has a way of necessity from parcel B to Knight Street over parcels H and J. The basis of this right, if it exists, is the presumption of a grant or reservation arising from the circumstances of the case.
Marshall
v.
Martin,
The mortgage held by Bailwitz was a purchase money mortgage on parcels H and J, executed simultaneously with the acquisition of these parcels by Krusch in 1925. As between Krusch and the mortgagee, there was then a conveyance of the fee to the mortgagee.
McKelvey
v.
Creevey,
Whatever title the defendants have acquired in their properties derives from the legal relationships which ensued from the execution of the mortgage by Krusch and its subsequent foreclosure. Krusch was the owner of parcels H, J and B when he mortgaged parcels H and J, and if any severance in the legal title of these parcels may be claimed to have occurred as an incident of this mortgage, it occurred at the time of the execution of the mortgage in 1925 and not at the time of its foreclosure in 1947. Moreover, as a purchase money mortgage, it had priority over any interest which might be asserted against, or attached to, parcels H and J as the property of Krusch, the mortgagor. The principle of a purchase money mortgage is to protect the vendor, who takes the mortgage simultaneously with the sale of land to secure the purchase price, against claims to, or interests in, the property arising or attaching through the purchaser mortgagor.
Joseph
v.
Donovan,
Prior to December 10,1925, when Krasch acqaired parcels H and J, he owned parcel A. This parcel was anencambered. There was then access from parcel B to Knight Street across parcel A. No basis existed at that time for a claim of a way of necessity from parcel B over parcels H and J. If the need for sach a way arose at all, it arose sabseqaently to Krasch’s acqaisition of parcels H and J, and came when the National Bank of Norwalk failed to inelnde parcel B in the foreclosare proceedings by which it obtained absolate title to parcel A in 1937, and when Krasch failed to redeem parcel A. Parcel B was incladed with parcel A in the mortgage given to the bank in 1930. Had parcel B been likewise incladed in the proceedings which the bank institated against Krasch in 1937 to foreclose this mortgage, or had Krasch redeemed parcel A, parcel B woald not have become landlocked and woald have continaed to have access to Knight Street across parcel A. The failare of the bank to foreclose its mortgage as to parcel B and the failare of Krasch to redeem parcel A did not operate to establish for parcel B a way over parcels H and J, and the trial coart was not in error in conclading that the plaintiff had no way of necessity over these parcels.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other jndges concarred.
