181 Iowa 965 | Iowa | 1917
The defendant excavated her lot to a depth of about S feet from the street, back about 100 feet and too near the wall heretofore mentioned, and on October 22, 1914, said wall collapsed and fell. The court submitted to the jury whether the excavation done at defendant’s instance caused the wall to collapse, and instructed them that, if it did, a verdict for the damages to the building and loss of rental should be returned. It should be added that the wall was never made use of by the Longshores or their grantees acquiring Lot 10 less the strip, a frame building having been thereon up to the time excavating was commenced. Want of care in what defendant caused to be done in excavating for a basement was not alleged, nor was there any claim for damages resulting to land of plaintiff in its natural state. The sole issue is whether plaintiff may recover on an implied grant of an easement in defendant’s land to support the -wall on the strip of land conveyed by the Longshores to the widow and heirs of James Frisbee, under whom plaintiff claims.
The lateral support to which an adjoining owner is entitled, however, is to the earth or soil in its natural state only, and not to buildings or other improvements which may be placed thereon. If the earth sinks away or falls, in consequence of the increased pressure of a wall or other artificial weight, when, but for such wall or weight, this would not have happened, there can be no recovery; for one so improving his land is bound so to do as not to interfere with his neighbor’s right to the full enjoyment of his premises. In other words, the improvement should have been set back far enough so that the increased requirement for support would have been afforded by his own land. Thus far, the law is too well settled to call for the citation of authority. In harmony with the principle last stated is the further holding by the weight of American authority that, even though the land would have sunk away without the increased pressure of building or other structure, there can be no recovery for injury resulting to the building or structure. Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199 (23 Am. R. 312); Jones on Easements, See, 620.
The withdrawal of lateral support may be in such a manner, however, as to create a liability beyond injury to the land. The law requires of every man that he shall so use his own property as not unnecessarily to injure that of his neighbor, and therefore if, in making the excavation,
There is another rule, however, sometimes denominated as an exception to those alluded to, and it is this:
“If, by grant, express or implied, the owner of the adjoining land has acquired a right of lateral support for his buildings in addition to that given him by law for his soil, the liability of the disturber by excavation is absolute in respect to the buildings as well as the soil, and no inquiry arises as to whether the work was done negligently or unskilfully.” Walker v. Strosnider, (W. Va.) 21 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 1, 3.
The theory of plaintiff is that, inasmuch as the title to the strip conveyed to his grantors and the remainder of Lot 10 was in a common owner, the Longshores, and the strip was first conveyed, the deed to the strip on the west side of Lot 10 included by implication all that was necessary to the full enjoyment of said strip with the wall thereon, and therefore carried an easement in the portion of the lot retained for the lateral support of said wall.
In England, recovery for injury to the building is awarded where its weight has not contributed to the loss of lateral support, and this rule obtains in Virginia. Stearns v. City of Richmond, 88 Va. 992 (14 S. E. 847). The point is merely suggested, and without intending to express an opinion thereon. Manifestly, the right to support of land and the right to support of buildings stand upon distinct footings, as to the mode of acquiring them, the former being
The case of Dalton v. Angus, supra, was given great consideration before the House of Lords and Privy Council of England, and, though there was disagreement there, as in the courts below, as to whether one might acquire a prescriptive right to lateral support, there was none as to such right under the circumstances disclosed in the case at bar. In the course of his opinion, the Lord Chancellor clearly expressed his view of the law on the subject:
“Land which affords support to land is affected by the superincumbent or lateral weight, as by an easement or servitude; the owner is restricted in the use of his own property,’ in precisely the same way as when he has granted a right of support to buildings.' The right, therefore, in my opinion, is properly called an easement, as it was by Lord Campbell in Humphries v. Brogden, 12 Q. B. 742; though when the land is in its natural state the easement is natural and not conventional. The same distinction exists as to rights in respect of running water: the easement of the riparian landowner is natural; that of the mill-owner on the stream, so far as it exceeds that of an ordinary riparian proprietor, is conventional, i. e., it must be established by prescription or grant.
“If at the time of the severance of the land from that of the adjoining proprietor it was not in its original state, but had buildings standing on it up to the dividing line, or if it were conveyed expressly with a view to the erection of such buildings, or to any other use of it which might render increased support necessary, there would then be an implied grant of such support as the actual state or the*973 contemplated use of the land would require] and the artificial would he inseparable from, and (as between the parties to the contract) would be a mere enlargement of, the natural. If a building is divided into floors or ‘flats,’ separately owned (an illustration which occurs in many of the authorities), the owner of each upper floor or ‘flat’ is entitled, upon the same principle, to vertical support from the lower part of the building, and to the benefit of such lateral support as may be of right enjoyed by the building itself. Caledonian Railway Company v. Sprot, 2 Macq. 449.
“I think it clear that any such right of support to a building, or part of a building, is an easement; and I agree with Lindley, J., and Bowen, J., that it is both scientifically and practically inaccurate to describe it as one of a merely negative kind. What is support? The- force of -gravity causes the superincumbent land, or building, to press downward upon what is below it, whether artificial or natural; and it has also a tendency to thrust outwards, laterally, any loose or yielding substance, such as earth or clay, until it meets with adequate resistance. Using the language of' the law of easements, I say that, in the case alike of vertical and- of lateral support, both to land and to buildings, the dominant tenement imposes upon the servient a 'positive and a constant burden, the sustenance of which, by the servient tenement, is necessary for" the safety and stability of the dominant. It is true that the benefit to .the dominant tenement arises, not from its own pressure upon the servient tenement, but from the power of the servient tenement to resist that pressure, and from its actual sustenance of the burden so imposed. But the burden and its sustenance are reciprocal, and inseparable from each other, and it can make no difference whether the dominant tene ment is said to impose, or the servient to sustain, the-weight,”
“It is, I think, conclusively settled by the decision in this House in Backhouse v. Bonomi, 9 H. L. Cas. 503, that the owner of land has a right to support from the adjoining soil; not a right to have the adjoining soil remain in its natural state (which right, if it existed, would be infringed as soon as any excavation was made in it), but a right to have the benefit of support, which is infringed as soon as, and not till, damage is sustained in consequence of t-he withdrawal of that support. This right is, I think, more properly described as a right of property, which the owner of the adjoining land is bound to respect, than as an easement, or a servitude ne facias, putting a restriction on the mode in which the neighbor is to use his land; but whether it is to be called by one name or the other is, I think, more a question as to words than as to things. And this is a right which, in the case of land, is given as of common right; it is not necessary either in pleading to allege, or in evidence to prove, any special origin for it; the burthen, both in pleading and in proof, is on those who deny its existence in the particular case. No doubt the right is suspended, or rather, perhaps, cannot be infringed, whilst the adjoining properties are in the hands of the same owner. He may dig pits on his own land, and suffer his own adjoining land to-fall into those pits just as he pleases. When he severs the ownership and conveys a part of the land to another, he gives the person to whom it is conveyed (unless the contrary is expressed) not a right to complain of what has been already done, but a right to have the support in future. It is, I think, now settled that the conveyance may be on such terms as to prevent any such right arising (see Rowbotham v. Wilson, 8 H. L. C. 348; Smith v. Darby, L. R. 7 Q. B. 716; Eadon v. Jeffcock, L. R. 7 Ex. 379; Aspden v. Seddon, L. R. 10 Ch. 394). But the*975 burthen both of pleading and proving such a case lies on those setting it up. And I think that the decision of this House in Backhouse v. Bonomi, 9 H. L. C. 503, also conclusively settles this, that, though the right of support to a building is not of common right and must be acquired, yet, when it is acquired, the right of the owner of the building to support for it, is precisely the same as that of the owner of land to support for it. Both Lord Cranworth and Lord Wensleydale say that this right also is more properly to be called a right of property, to be respected by the owner of the adjoining land, than a negative easement or.servitude ne facias
See also opinion of judges in 4 Queen’s Bench Div. 162, 3 L. R. Q. B. Div. 85.
The law as thus stated has been uniformly recognized by the courts of this country. Lampman v. Milks, 21 N. Y. 505; Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co. v. Gayton, 67 Neb. 263; Liquid Carbonic Co. v. Wallace, 219 Pa. St. 457; City of Quincy v. Jones, 76 Ill. 231 (20 Am. R. 243); Tunstall v. Christian, 80 Va. 1 (56 Am. R. 581); Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199 (23 Am. R. 312); 14 Cyc. 1166; Jones on Easements, Sec. 605; Gale on Easements (9th Ed.), p. 372. Citation of decisions and text books laying down this rule might be extended indefinitely. Indeed, though appellant contends to the contrary and cites numerous decisions, in none is to be found an expression in derogation to the rule as stated. It was applied in Aspden v. Seddon, L. R. 10 Ch. App. 394, affirming a decision of Sir G. Jessel’s, Master of the Rolls; Geible v. Smith, 146 Pa. St. 276; Stevenson v. Wallace, 27 Gratt. (Va.) 77. In the last case, the court declared that:
The “right to .support exists in respect of land only, and not in respect of buildings; but the former right remains, though houses are built. Brown v. Robins, 4 Hurl. & Nor. R. 186 (28 L. J. Exch. 250); Stroyan v. Knowles,
Cases may be found declaring that an easement may not be reserved by implication, but the consensus of opinion seems to be that none is so reserved unless it is actually annexed to the grantor’s estate at the time of the grant; is open, visible, and continuous, and necessary to the enjoyment of the estate which the grantor retains. Jones on Easements, Sec. 141.
There is some confusion in the cases, as pointed out in Wells v. Garbutt, 132 N. Y. 430 (30 N. E. 978), in consequence of overlooking the distinction between the implication of a grant and that of a reservation; and it should be borne in mind that, though a grantor may not derogate against his own grant, a grantee may take the language of the deed most strongly in his favor. The existence of the wall on the strip of land could not well have escaped the observation of defendant’s grantor, and attention to the strip was directed by the exception in the deed. The wall was not only actually attached to be strip retained, but -was open and plainly visible. To be continuous, an easement must be such
“The continuous and the noncontinuous may be granted and annexed to the same estate. Upon the unity of title, they would both cease to exist as easements. Upon the severance of the estate, the continuous would revert and pass by the conveyance, but the noncontinuous would not revert or pass but by a new creation. This distinction, and this result, is recognized in the earlier and later cases upon the subject.”
It was observed in Larsen v. Peterson, 53 N. J. Eq. 88 (30 Atl. 1094), that:
“Mr. Gale, in the later editions of his book — Secs. 50, 52 (4th Eng. Ed. 1868, pp. 87-89) — comes to the conclusion that the test of continuousness is that there should be an alteration in the quality — or 'disposition’ of — the tenement, which is intended to be, and is, in its nature, permanent, and gives the tenement peculiar qualities, and results in making one part dependent, in a measure, upon the other. It is not of the essence of this test, as applied to a watercourse, that the water should flow of itself continuously, but the test is that the artificial apparatus by which its flow is produced is of a permanent nature. It is with a view of bringing out this quality of permanence that the learned author contrasts this class of easements with a right of way, 'the enjoyment of which depends upon an actual interference of man at each time of enjoyment.’ Now, what is meant by that sentence is that the burthen of the easement in the case of a right of waj is not felt by the servient tenement except at the moment of each enjoyment of it. A permanent structure upon, or alteration of, the servient tenement is not a necessary element of such an easement.*979 And by the expression ‘interference of man at each time of enjoyment/ is meant no more than an interference with the servient tenement by an entry upon it, as illustrated not only by ordinary rights of way, but also by rights of way with a right to take something from the servient tenement, as in Polden v. Bastard, 4 Best & S. 258, L. R. 1 Q. B. 156.”
It is said, in Section 143 of Jones on Easements, that:
“The test of continuousness is that there is an alteration or arrangement of a tenement which makes one part of it dependent in some measure upon another. This alteration or arrangement must be intended to be permanent in its nature.”
Enough has been said to indicate that the easement for the support of the wall is continuous; for such a structure is regarded as permanent, and no act of interference with the servient estate is essential to its enjoyment.
Such easement would also seem- to be of strict necessity, —that is, reasonably necessary to the support of the wall. Pitney, V. C., after an exhaustive view of the authorities in Toothe v. Bryce, 50 N. J. Eq. 589 (25 Atl. 182), expressed the opinion that the necessity must be absolute; and authorities are not wanting employing this language. On the other hand, Lord Campbell declared in Ewart v. Cochrane, 7 Jur. (N. S.) 925, that:
“When I said it was necessary, I do not mean that it was so essentially necessary that the property could have no value whatever without this easement; but T mean that it was necessary for the convenient and comfortable enjoyment of the property as it existed before the time of the grant.”
And in Wells v. Garbutt, supra, it is said that:
“While absolute physical necessity need not be shown, as in the case of landlocked premises, or the support of a*980 wall, there must be a reasonable necessity, as distinguished from mere convenience.”
In a sense, no easement or quasi easement can well be absolutely necessary to any possible enjoyment of property. The most that can be required is that it be, in addition to being apparent and continuous, essential to use and enjoyment of the premises as permanently improved at the time of the conveyance of the servient estate. And this appears to be what is meant by the term “strict necessity,” in defining easements reserved by implication. Warren v. Blake, 54 Me. 276 (89 Am. Dec. 748); Carbrey v. Willis, 7 Allen (Mass.) 364 (83 Am. Dec. 688); Kelly v. Dunning, (N. J.) 10 Atl. 276; Jones on Easements, Sec. 154; Burns v. Gallagher, 62 Md. 462; Dunklee v. Wilton Railroad Co., 24 N. H. 489. The term “necessity” is to be understood as meaning that there could be no other reasonable mode of enjoying the dominant tenement without the easement.
There are many decisions recognizing an implied reservation as the converse Of an implied grant. Elliott v. Rhett, 5 Rich. Law (S. C.) 405 (57 Am. Dec. 750); Seibert v. Levan, 8 Pa. St. 383 (49 Am. Dec. 525); Seymour v. Lewis, 2 Beas. (N. J. Eq.) 439 (78 Am. Dec. 108); Outerbridge v. Phelps, 58 How. Prac. (N. Y.) 77; John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Patterson, (Ind.) 2 N. E. 188. Some of these cases seem to have missed the distinction always to be observed in ascertaining whether there is an implied grant of an easement, and whether there is an implied reservation. Where the conveyance of the so-called servient estate is complete and absolute On its face, its very terms exclude all other interest therein, and there can be no derogation of the title thus passed, save when the estate retained is permanently so improved as that to deprive it of an easement in that conveyed would render impossible its full use and enjoyment in-that condition. Here, the easement of support was strictly necessary to the use of the strip of land
There was no error, and the judgment is — Affirmed.