Mrs. Jessie Boss Warlick filed a suit to enjoin Borne Loan & Finance Company from using a stairway and other parts of a building owned by the plaintiff, for passage to and from the second story of a building of the defendant. The petition as amended was dismissed on general demurrer, and the plaintiff excepted. One of the questions presented is • whether the petition showed a prescriptive easement in the defendant. The following facts appeared:
J. T. Warlick, the husband of the plaintiff, died in 1927, owning besides other realty four store buildings in the city of Borne, known as 202, 204, 206, and 208 Broad Street. In 1928 his real property was divided among his heirs at law, by a preliminary written agreement and deeds pursuantly executed. In this division the four buildings above mentioned were disposed of as follows : The plaintiff, Mrs. Warlick, received the property known as 208, Miss Susie Warlick, a daughter, received 202, and other daughters received lots 204 and 206. The buildings were contiguous, and each had an upper or second story used for various purposes. In No. 208 was a stairway leading to a hall in the second story of that building, and in the same building, on the second floor, was a “fire door” which afforded an opening into “the upstairs of the other buildings.” This fire door, hall, and stairway were used as a means of passage to and from the second stories of the other buildings, during the lifetime of J. T. Warlick, and continued to be so used until and after the division among the heirs at law. In the divisional agreement the stairway was mentioned as “going to” Mrs. Warlick as a part of No. 208, but it was not expressly mentioned in any of the deeds based thereon; nor was there any reference to use or passage. In 1930 Miss Susie Warlick conveyed her building, known as 202, for a valuable consideration, to the Borne Loan & Finance Company, the deed of conveyance being duly recorded in November of that year. This deed, after describing the property conveyed, proceeded as follows: (1) “This conveyance also includes any and all rights grantor herein may have in and to the use of the stairway leading from Broad Street to the second *421 floor of the buildings located on the J. T. Warlick property, and which was divided by deeds of partition between the heirs of J. T. Warlick in December, 1938, and also all rights to use of the hallways in said buildings.” (3) “The property convejred by this deed being the same property conveyed by Mrs. Jessie Eoss Warlick et al. to Miss Susie Warlick in deed dated December 5, 1938, and recorded in Book 134, page 453, of the Floyd County deed records.” (3) “To have and to hold the said land, together with all appurtenances thereto belonging, to the only use of the said party of the second part, in fee simple.” (4) A general warranty of title as to such “land and appurtenances.”
The present suit was filed by Mrs. Warlick in December, 1941, and in it she sought to enjoin the defendant from using the “fire door, hallway, and stairway” in her building as means of passage to and from the second story of the building so conveyed by Miss Warlick to the defendant. It appeared from the petition that the defendant immediately entered into possession under its deed from Miss Susie Warlick, using the “fire door, hallway, and stairway” just as they were being used at the time of its purchase, and that it had continued in such possession and use until the time the suit was filed.
Several interesting questions have been argued with respect to whether Miss Susie Warlick acquired an easement as to these portions of store building No. 308, in the division of her father’s estate by the contract and deeds to which reference has been made; but after a consideration of the whole case, we have reached the conclusion that whatever might be the proper solution of the other questions, the petition was subject to general demurrer, and properly dismissed, as showing upon its face a prescriptive easement in the defendant as to such property, based on seven-years possession under color of title. We shall therefore limit our discussion to this question.
Where the other elements of prescription are present, “adverse possession of lands, under written evidence of title, for seven years, shall give a like title by prescription.” Code, § 85-407. This provision of law applies in like manner to easements. Code, § 85-409;
Phinizy
v.
Augusta,
47
Ga.
260, 270;
Smith
v.
Jensen,
156
Ga.
814 (3), 833 (
In
Westmoreland
v.
Westmoreland,
92
Ga.
233 (
The deed here not only conveyed “any and all rights grantor . . may have in and to the use of the stairway leading from Broad Street to the second floor of the buildings,” but conveyed “also all rights to use of the hallways in said buildings.” Furthermore, the property conveyed “by this deed” was described as “being the same property conveyed” to the grantor by other parties by a previous deed, to which reference was definitely made; and following all of this was an
habendum
clause as to “the said land, together with all appurtenances thereto belonging,” plus a warranty of title “to the said land and appurtenances.” Manifestly this deed was sufficient as color of title as to an easement or right to use the stairway, fire-door, and hallway in the plaintiff’s building as means of ingress and egress to and from the second floor of the defendant’s building in the manner set forth in the plaintiff’s petition. If by any possibility it could be said that the deed was ambiguous as to the scope and purpose of the particular easement intended, the language was sufficient to furnish a key for identification, and the pleaded circumstances would explain such ambiguity. See
Cook
v.
Winter,
supra;
Tumlin
v.
Perry,
108
Ga.
520 (
When the instant petition is properly construed in the light of its omissions as well as its averments, it shows upon its face that the defendant, before the suit was filed, had acquired a -prescriptive right to use the stairway and the related parts of the plaintiff’s building as described in the petition, for passage to and from the second story of the defendant’s building; and this being true, the court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and dismissing the action. Compare
Toney
v.
Ledford,
184
Ga.
856 (2) (
