28 Conn. 183 | Conn. | 1859
Previous to the 10th of March, 1847, the plaintiff was the owner of an' undivided half of a [ *184 J gangway leading *to a lot owned by him in severalty, and to a lot belonging to the heirs of Michael Marshall, the other half of said gangway being owned by said heirs. These lots, with the gangway, had all been common property, and on a division, under a decree of the superior court, the gangway was to be and remained a mutual gangway,' for the joint accommodation of the respective owners of said lots, and was owned by them as tenants in common. On said 10th of March, the plaintiff sold his lot and his share of the gangway, but in his deed he attempted to reserve to himself a right to pass and repass, through said gangway, to a woodhouse, standing on another lot adjoining it. That reservation, together with the clause of the deed describing the share of the gangway intended to be conveyed, is in these words : “ Also one undivided half, as tenant in common with the heirs of Michael Marshall, in the gangway lying eastwardly of the land of the heirs of said
Assuming that it would have been good had the plaintiff owned in fee the whole gangway instead of an undivided portion of it, it resolves itself into a question, whether a tenant in common can create such an easement in the common estate. In other words, could the plaintiff, before he deeded his interest in the gangway, have conveyed such an easement to a stranger; or, had his deed contained no such clause of exception or reservation, could his grantee, after he had become a tenant in common with the Marshall heirs, have reconveyed to the plaintiff the right which he now claims.
As the title to the gangway was in the plaintiff and the Marshall heirs as tenants in common, it was, of course, subject to all the incidents of such an estate; and the fact that it *was to remain open for the accommodation of [ *185 J the two lots, did not deprive it of them. The ownership of the adjoining lots might, at any time, be so shifted that it would no longer bé needed as a passway, and then, if not before, a court would, on the application of either party, cause it to be divided, so that each proprietor should possess his land in severalty; and, in theory at least, being common property, it is at all times subject to be divided and aparted between the owners, and must, therefore, remain subject to the same ndes in respect to the power of one of the tenants in common, to convey away any portion of the common estate, that any other real estate held by tenants- in common is subject to. Now it is well settled that one tenant in common can neither sell nor incumber any part of the estate by metes and bounds, so as to prevent such a division or distribution as would give the other tenants in common an unincumbered title to the part thus sold or incumbered. Griswold v. Johnson, 5 Conn., 363. Porter v. Hill, 9 Mass., 34. Merrill v. Berkshire, 11 Pick., 269. Deeds and other conveyances of such property are not merely inoperative against the rights of the other tenants, when a partition is made, but they are, as remarked by Judge Hosmer, undoubtedly void, and the other co-tenants may at all times so treat them. It follows, then, that unless this reservation or exception is, in fact, a reservation of a right in the whole pass
The superior court having ruled in conformity to the views here expressed, a new trial is not advised.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.