75 Miss. 495 | Miss. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
At and before the time the appellee purchased his land from the McLeods, the appellant was occupying her little lot of ground under a verbal contract of purchase from the McLeods, and was, and for some considerable space of time had been, using, as a way of ingress and egress to and from her premises, the old wood road of the McLeods, which wood road is, substantially, the private way of necessity now claimed by appellant in this suit. It is true that appellant acquired her paper title to her lot of ground about a year after the appellee acquired his,
It is well settled law that one who sells a parcel of land to another which is wholly surrounded by the other lands of the seller, impliedly grants a right of way to the interior lot so sold over the exterior lands retained. And when one sells his exterior and surrounding lands, but retains the interior lands for himself, the rule is the same as to a way of necessity over the exterior lands. And when one sells interior lands surrounded in part by the other lands of the seller and in part by the lands of strangers, the implied grant of a way to the interior land exists over the exterior lands of the seller. The reasons need not be sought afar, for they are obvious at a glance, and they are these — viz.: (1) The owner of the interior land co'uld neither reach nor use his land unless a way to it existed
It is idle to talk about the appellant having and being able to maintain a right to a way over Rhynes’ or Byron’s and the town’s cemetery land. She has no such way, and had not when either she or appellee bought their lands from the Mc-Leods. It is true she might be permitted to make a way over Rhynes’ land, or over Byron’s, and that of the town, but she has no right so to do. If allowed, it would be purely of grace on the part of the stranger owners.
The principles of law governing the case are not doubtful, but their application to its peculiar facts is difficult and delicate. To compel appellee to abstain from interference with appellant, or her family, in the use of the old road, as laid down on the map shown in the transcript, or as deflected, by reason of obstructions placed in and across the old way by appellee, would, it seems to us, prove unnecessarily burdensome and hurtful to appellee. If a way near the old one can be found, it would appear harsh and oppressive to now, in effect, require the appellee to reopen the original way by tearing down fences or buildings and reopening gardens or other inclosed lots about his residence. But that the appellant must be permitted to use a way, and a convenient way for all ordinary purposes, is too clear for controversy, and, as we see the physical facts disclosed in the record, no great difficulty will be encountered by the court below in granting the substantial relief prayed by appellant, on
The decree of the court lelow is reversed, the injunction restored, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.