87 W. Va. 618 | W. Va. | 1921
TMs appeal is prosecuted from a decree of the circuit court of Summers county enjoining the defendant from using a road over the lands of the plaintiff, and cancelling a deed made to him purporting to convey an easement over plaintiff’s lands, as a cloud upon his title thereto.
On the 29th of January, 1887, G. W. Ohattin was the owner of a tract of land lying in a bend of Greenbrier river in Summers county, and on that date he conveyed to his son J. D. Chattin a tract of 37i£ acres out of this larger tract. In this deed he also conveyed a right-of-way from the 37i,2-acre tract across the remaining land to the county road, to be located so as to do the least damage to the remaining lands. On the 10th of October, 1893, J. I). Chattin conveyed this 37%-aere tract, together with the easement over the remaining- lands, to his sister Sallie J. Ballengee. On the 30th of January, 1894, G. W. Ohattin conveyed out of the lands remaining to him a tract of 28 acres to his daughter Sallie J. Ballengee, together with a right-of-way extending from this 28-acre tract of land up the river to the county road, being an-entirely different right-of-way from that mentioned in the conveyance made by him to his son J. D. Chattin. On the 24-th of July, 1896, G. W. Chattin, having died, his heirs conveyed to Sallie J. Ballengee the remainder of the tract of land out of which the-37]4-acres and the 28 acres had been carved, so that at that time she became the owner of all of the tract originally owned by her father G. W. Chattin. She held the same until the first of January, 1904, upon which date she conveyed to her son, the defendant S. C. Ballengee, a tract described in the deed as containing 68 acres, and which was composed of the two tracts of 37 acres' and 28 acres, and in this deed she also conveyed, as appurtenant to the 68-acre tract, a right-of-way over the remaining tract, up the river to the county road, being upon the same location as the right-of-way George W. Chattin had conveyed in the deed of January 30, 1894-, as appurtenant to the 28 acres. ISTo mention was made in this deed of any other right-of-way. On the same day she conveyed to another son, Homer Ballengee, the remainder of the tract of land, described
The defendant demurred to the bill, and upon this appeal insists that his demurrer should be sustained, upon the ground that if, as contended by the plaintiff, the deed of April 14, 1919, from Sallie J. Ballengee to him was not effective to 'qonvey any , estate, the said Sallie J. Ballengee, having long before that time parted with all of her’ estate in both tracts' of land, it could not constitute a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title; and upon the further ground that if, as alleged in the bill, the -defendant was using the right-of-way upon the location described .in .the-bill, the plaintiff was not .in possession thereof, and .could not maintain a -suit in equity to remove a cloud. ■There is no merit in either of these contentions. The., fact that the deed attempting to convey the easement may have been
The defendant insists, however, that under the facts proven in this case he has the right to pass, over the plaintiff’s land upon the location in controversy, because this way was originally appurtenant to the 37%-aere tract conveyed to J. I>. Chattin by G¡. W. Chattin, and which 37i/2-acre tract is now owned by him as a part of the 68 acres conveyed to him by’ his mother; that the deed made to him by his mother on the 14th of April, 1919, conveyed to him this right, and that he is entitled to exercise it under that deed; and further, that he has acquired the right by prescription, having, as he contends.
That the road now in question was used by J.. D. Chattin as an incident to the occupancy of the 37%-acre tract is proven beyond dispute, and that this 37%-acre tract is now owned by the defendant is likewise undisputed, but does the fact that he became the owner of a tract of land which included this 37% acres also have the effect, of vesting in him the easement over the 90-acre tract which had been used as appurtenant to the 37%-aere tract when it was owned as a separate tract? As before shown, Sallie J. Ballengee, the mother of the defendant became the owner of all three of the tracts of land, to-wit, the 3'7%-acre tract, the 28-acre tract, and the 90-acre tract, being the remainder of the G. W. Chattin farm, and she remained the owner of the entire farm from 1896 until 1904, when she conveyed 68 acres of it to the defendant, and the remaining 90 acres to her other son, Homer Ballengee, who subsequently conveyed the same to the plaintiff. During the time that Mrs. Ballengee owned the whole farm this road was used by those living on the farm as an outlet to the public highway. Of course she, being the owner of all of it, had a right to make any use she pleased of it, but was there an easement existing during this time appurtenant to the 37%-acre. tract? It must be borne in mind that an easement is a dominant estate. The owner of it holds it adversely to the owner of the land, and can there be such a thing as a party holding-an estate in his own land adverse to himself? It is clearly established that when the owner of a tract of land to which an easement is appurtenant acquires the tract upon which the easement is a burden, the servient and dominant estates become merged, and thereafter there exists but one estate. The easement ceases to exist. See Pingley v. Pingley, 82 W. Va. 228, and authorities there cited. It is quite clear that during the time that Mrs. Ballengee was the owner of this land there was in existence no easement over any part of it as appurtenant to any other part. The easement that had been theretofore appurtenant to the 37%-acre tract became merged in the other
The defendant contends, however, that aside from the conveyance above referred to, he has acquired this easement by prescription; that he has used the same for more than ten years without permission from the owner of the 90-acre tract, and without any objection to' his use thereof by the owners of that tract of land. It appears that at tire time the defendant secured the deed to the 68-acre tract of land, the way in question over the 90-acre tract was being used as an outlet from the farm generally; that shortly thereafter the house on the 68-acre tract was destroyed by fire, and that another house was not built thereon until about the 3rear 1913; that during these interven
We find no error in the decree complained of, and the same is affirmed. •
Affirmed.