124 A. 540 | Conn. | 1924
The defendant claims that it has a right as trustee owner of the pieces E and F, to provide, by means of a passway along the easterly side of piece E, for access to the gangway C B, and to use this gangway in connection with the rear portion of piece F for all purposes to which the gangway may legally be put. The defendant contends that when in 1880, the piece F was by William T. Pratt and others conveyed to William W. Larrabee, and thus severed in title and ownership from piece E, it still had as appurtenant an easement over the gangway. It bases its contention upon the rule that an easement is appurtenant to any part of a dominant estate, and that when it is divided by deed, devise or other legal method, each of the parts resulting from such division may use the easement as far as applicable.
This rule is well established, and no question is made by plaintiff as to its correctness; the controversy between the parties involves its scope and application.
The leading case of Hills v. Miller, 3 Paige Ch. (N. Y.) 254, 257, states the rule as follows: "As the right is annexed to the estate, for the benefit of which the easement or servitude is created, the right is not destroyed by a division of the estate to which it is appurtenant. And the owner or assignee of any portion of that estate may claim the right, so far as it is applicable to his part of the property, provided the right can be enjoyed as to the separate parcels without any additional charge or burden to the proprietor of the servient estate." This case is referred to and the extract above given often quoted in subsequent decisions and by text-writers, as a foundation case and a point of departure in all subsequent discussions upon this general topic. See 19 Corpus Juris, 948; Jones on Easements, § 30; 9 R. C. L. 803, § 59. The English law is the same. Goddard on Easements (8th Ed. 1921) 390. *631
It is unquestionably the law of this State. Sweeney
v. Landers, Frary Clark,
In Corpus Juris as above cited, the principle as stated in Hills v. Miller, supra, is adopted almost inverbis as a statement of the law, and then by way of explanation, founded on other cases cited, that work expands and explains the expression "so far as it is applicable to his part of the property," by adding, "and it inures to the benefit of the owners of all subdivisions so situated that it can be used."
The position of the defendant involves the claim that the easement persists and inheres in the piece F after subdivision absolutely, unless as to it the easement has been extinguished and negatived by express terms. No case has been called to our attention by counsel, and our examination discloses none that supports this position. Such a claim was made in Dawson
v. St. Paul F. M. Ins. Co.,
The recent case of Cetlin v. Bradford,
In Alling Realty Co. v. Olderman,
In some States it has been held that an easement appurtenant to a parcel of land must either begin or end upon the land, but this court has held such a pre-requisite not essential, and established availability for use in connection with the dominant estate as the correct test of appurtenance. In Graham v. Walker,
From the consideration of all of the cases above cited, there emerges as the true rule for determining the appurtenance of an easement of way in favor of a parcel *634 of land resulting from a subdivision, the existence of the fact of applicability to such part of the subdivided property, a situation so that it can be used in connection therewith. Having regard to the effect of the two cases last cited, we may say that in this jurisdiction the test is availability of the way to the dominant land either by its directly abutting on the same, or by a capacity of reaching it over other land over which the dominant owner has a legal right of passage.
The defendant further claims that the facts in the instant case satisfy the requirement just stated, in that there arose by virtue of the conveyance of piece F in 1880, an appurtenant right of way over the piece E, and that this conveyance did not terminate the easement theretofore obtaining in favor of F which an integral part of the tract Y on Map No. 2.
When such a subdivision occurs as took place in the present case, a part of an original tract which is cut off from physical contiguity to a gangway or passway, can enjoy the easement which it originally had over such a way in three ways: by a specific creation of a new easement of way over the land intervening between it and the existing passway; by such a way arising from necessity; or by a way over such intervening land deriving its validity as an appurtenance implied from use theretofore made of such intervening land in connection with the land cut off by the conveyance. In the deed from Pratt and others to Larrabee in 1880, there is clearly no new easement of way created across piece E in favor of piece F, nor can any way of necessity arise, since the rear part of piece F could be reached from Asylum Street directly over its whole depth, and also there was appurtenant to it the gangway marked I on Map 1. The defendant must, therefore, rely upon an impled easement or, as it is termed in the books, a quasi-easement. *635
We have in the case of Whiting v. Gaylord,
There is certainly nothing in the facts appearing in the instant cast to indicate an open, visible, apparent, continuous and necessary enjoyment by the owners of the piece F of a passageway across the southerly side of piece E. On the contrary, it appears that between 1880 and 1885 such additions were made to the buildings on piece E that there remained upon its rear an open space of only about three and one half feet, and that this space was not at any time during its existence used as a passway from piece F to the mutual gangway B, C. To an ordinary observer no passway would be suggested by examining this strip, and if he also observed, as he might, that piece F had a frontage on Asylum Street by which the highway might be reached from any point of its area, and if, in addition to such an examination, he consulted the land records of the town of Hartford and discovered the existence of an easement in favor of this piece over the gangway marked I, the idea of an implied easement of way over the southern part of piece E, *636 would certainly not be obvious or convincing. We therefore conclude that when tract F was sold in 1880 without the express creation of an easement in its favor over piece E, it lost the right which it had as part of the piece Y on Map 2.
The claim that this original right of access to the gangway existing in favor of piece F became dormant or suspended after 1880, but was revived when the ownership of pieces F and E became reunited in 1922, and the owner was thus able to create in favor of piece F an easement of passage across the south end of piece E, has no foundation in reason or authority. In Whiting
v. Gaylord,
The view which we have taken regarding the existence of the claimed easement, renders it unnecessary to consider the claims of the plaintiff as to abandonment