155 Iowa 519 | Iowa | 1912
The plaintiff is the owner of a certain lot, described as No. 4 of a subdivision of part of lot No. 59, in the city of Davenport, and the defendant is the owner • of the premises lying immediately north of said lot. Upon plaintiff’s lot is a store building, facing west
Subsequent to this conveyance, the Davenport National Bank sold and conveyed the property immediately north of lot four to the defendant Savings Bank; and up to the time when the defendant Savings Bank commenced the construction of a new building, as hereinafter stated, it continued in the active use and enjoyment of the easement reserved by its grantor, as aforesaid. A short time prior to the institution of this suit, the defendant Savings Bank began the construction of a new building upon its said premises, the plan of which building contemplated a door through its south wall at the same point where the door existed in the old building. Such plan also contemplated the discharge of water falling on the roof of said building upon the surface of the pavement in the alley on the east and the construction of a cellarway from the north or “dead” end of said alley.
In this action, plaintiff asks an injunction restraining the defendant bank from further claiming or using lot No. four, or any part thereof, as a means of access to or exit from its said building, and from discharging the surface water from the roof of said building into the alley, where it will freeze and obstruct the use of said alley, and from making or maintaining a cellarway in said alley with cover or coping above the natural grade or level of the surface thereof, and for general relief. By an amendment to -her petition, she alleges that defendant, in constructing the wall of its building along the east ten feet of lot four, has extended the same some eight or ten inches south of the true line; also that certain window sills and caps and other parts of said wall and fixtures attached thereto project over the true line and constitute a trespass upon her rights, and she asks that these alleged wrongs may have appropriate remedy. The defendant bank denies all allegations of wrong and trespass on its part, and pleads
There being no appeal by the defendant, the correctness of the decree below, so far as it relates to the relief -granted the plaintiff, is not in question, and will not be further considered. The several matters of which plaintiff complains may be grouped as follows:
It is true, as a general rule, that an easement in a particular building, coupled with no interest in the soil upon which it .stands, is terminated or lost by the destruction of the building. Shirley v. Crab, 138 Ind. 200 (37 N. E. 130, 46 Am. St. Rep. 376); Ballard v. Butler, 30 Me. 94. But, where the easement is of a right in or over a specified lot or tract of land for the benefit of another lot or tract of land, it constitutes a right appurtenant to the land, and not merely to some structure upon the land; and it does not fail or terminate with the existence of the building or buildings thereon. Bangs v. Parker, 71 Me. 458; Chew v. Cook, 39 N. J. Eq. 396. The reservation made in the deed under which plaintiff holds her title makes no mention of any buildng or other structure upon either the dominant or servient estate, and the only ex
The reservation was not made for the personal use of the grantor alone, but for that of his grantees as well; and under familiar principles the right to such easement passed by the conveyance of the dominant estate to the ■defendant, not, as we have already seen, as a mere appurtenant to the building thereon, but as appurtenant to the land.- As such, it was not destroyed by the removal of the old building; and the trial court was right in upholding the appellee’s claim thereto:
There appears to be no sound reason for disturbing the decree, and it is therefore affirmed.