60 Iowa 256 | Iowa | 1882
At the same time Hageman and Munson entered into a written contract by which it was stipulated, among other things, that Munson should put up a brick or stone building' on said lot, and provide for stairs to the second story of both buildings, out of his building, to be used in common by the' parties, and both to be at one-half the expense of building- and keeping the stairs in repair, and also, the roof over the-hall in which they are situated. The conveyance and the-contract were acknowledged and recorded. Munson proceeded and erected a building upon the lot so purchased, and another fractional part of the same lot adjoining on the west.
In October, 1880, the defendant having become the owner of the Munson block, or building, sold and conveyed it by deed of general warranty to the plaintiff. This action was brought to recover for a breach of the covenant against incumbrances, upon the ground that the right reserved to use the stairway was such breach.
The court, in ruling upon the evidence and instructions given to the jury, held that the deed and contract from Hageman to Munson- contained such reservations as constitute an incumbrance upon the property, and that the defendant’s covenant against incumbrances is broken. Counsel for the defendant contend that the incumbrance did not run with the land, and that it was but a personal covenant between the immediate parties thereto, because the stairway was not in existence when the covenant or reservation was made.
Put when the defendant conveyed to the plaintiff, whatever may have been the previous condition of things, there was a valid subsisting incumbrance, in the nature of an easement, upon the property, which easement was clearly a breach ’ of the covenant against incumbrances. There is no claim made that Hageman cannot hold and enjoy the easement. If so, it follows that it is an incumbrance.
IY. Objection is made to the manner in which the plaintiff interrogated the witness as to the damages to the property by reason of the incumbrance. Probably, in the questions put to the witnesses, all the circumstances surrounding the matter in controversy might have been more fully stated. But taking the cross-examination and re-examination of the Witnesses, there appears to have been nothing which was proper, withheld from the jury.
Kurtz v. McCune, 22 Wis., 598, cited by appellant, was a case where damages were claimed for a breach of covenant because’ of an easement, which consisted of the right to back water on a part of the land by a mill-dam. It was held that no right of action would lie, because the easement obviously and notoriously affected the physical condition of the land at the time of the conveyance, and, therefore, was not embraced in a- general covenant against incumbrances.
This court, as we have seen, has held the contrary doctrine. In the case of Barlow v. McKinley, supra, the Rock Island railroad was completed and in full operation upon the land at the time the conveyance was made, and it was held that it was an incumbrance, and that the easement was a breach of the covenants in the deed, although the grantee had full knowledge of the existence of the incumbrance at the time he accepted the covenant. We think this is the better rule, and adhere to the decisions made by this court. Any other holding, would, in our view, be an invasion of the elementary rule, that exceptions and reservations cannot be en-grafted by parol upon the deed.
The defendant objected to the question, and the objection was overruled, and the witness answered in substance that he might at one time have made such a remark. It is urged that the question was not proper cross-examination. We think it was, because it was calling for evidence which was, impliedly at least, contradictory of his testimony in chief. Again, it is said that it was not a proper way of impeaching the witness — that the question fails to state time when, or place where, the statements were made. It is true that, ordinarily, where it is sought to impeach a witness by proof of contradictory statements, his attention must be called thereto, and time and place, and the person to whom the statement was made, must be stated. This is due to the witness, that his memory may be refreshed. But in view of the answer made to the question in this case, and that the subject was not further pursued, we are not prepared to say that the court erred.
Affirmed.