64 N.Y. 65 | NY | 1876
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *68 Both plaintiff and defendant appeal from the judgment of the Supreme Court in this action, each claiming to be entitled to the exclusive possession and beneficial enjoyment of the premises in dispute. The court below adjudged the plaintiff to be the owner in fee, and the defendant to be entitled to an easement in the premises, substantially destructive of the value of the proprietary right of the plaintiff.
Both parties derive title from a common source, that of the defendant being prior in point of time to that under which the plaintiff claims. The controversy hinges upon the construction and effect of the grant of the original proprietors of the premises owned by the defendant, and the extent and limits of that grant. The original proprietors being the *70 owners of a large tract in the city of Buffalo, of which the premises in dispute, as well as those confessedly owned by the defendant were a part, subdivided the same into lots, making a map thereof upon which was designated a street called Garden street, sixty-three feet in width, and conveyed the several lots or parcels to different grantees with reference to the map. The premises of the defendant were conveyed to one Sawin, and bounded upon Garden street on the west, and the defendant, as the grantee of Sawin, claims that the grant carried the fee to the center of the street, subject to an easement in favor of the grantees of other portions of the tract and the public, in the street as laid down upon the map, and that the width of the street having been reduced by twenty feet upon each side, he is the owner of that twenty feet divested of the easement.
Whether a grant of lands bounded by a street, highway or running stream, extends to the center of such street, highway or stream, or is limited to the exterior line or margin of the same, depends upon the intent of the parties to the grant as manifested by its terms, so that the question as to the true boundary is, in all cases, one of interpretation of the deed or grant.
Learned judges have contended, and in some of the States it has been substantially held, that in such cases the question of boundary is rather one to be determined by reasons of public policy than by the intent, determined by the ordinary rules of construction, although in no instance is it claimed that a grantor may not restrict his grant so as to exclude the soil of the street, highway or stream; the most that is claimed by any is that nothing short of an intention, expressed in ipsis verbis, to exclude the soil in such cases should exclude it.
The rule, however, in this State is well settled, that no particular words or form of expression is necessary to restrict the grant to the exterior line of a street or margin of a stream, and exclude the soil of each; but that while the presumption is in every case that the grantor does not intend to retain the fee of the soil within the lines of the street or under the *71 water, such presumption may be overcome by the use of any terms in describing the premises granted, which clearly indicate an intent not to convey the soil of the street or stream. It is not sufficient to exclude from the operation of the grant the soil of a highway, usque ad medium filum, that the grant is made with reference to a plan annexed, the measuring or coloring of which would exclude it, or by lines and measurements which would only bring the premises to the exterior line of the highway, or that they are bounded generally by the line of the highway or along the highway, or by any similar expressions.
Although the highway is in one sense a monument, it is regarded as a line, and the center of the highway in such case is regarded as the true boundary indicated, as is the case when a tree, stone or other similar object is designated as a monument; the center, in the absence of any other indication, is regarded as giving the true boundary or limit of the grant. (Berridge v. Ward, 10 C.B. [N.S.], 400; Wallace v. Fee,
The defendant therefore acquired, and has, no title to the soil of the street, but the fee is in the plaintiff, and although the acquisition may be entirely barren and the recovery in this action be entirely fruitless, he is entitled to a judgment for the fee of the land subject to any easement which the defendant may have in the same.
The claim of the defendant which has something of plausibility and equity to sustain it, that upon the assumption that by the grant to Sawin the soil of the street was excluded, yet the exterior lines of Garden street being changed, the center remaining the same, his boundary line necessarily changed so as to conform to the reduced width of the street and preserve his frontage upon it cannot be sustained. The lines of his grant are fixed and permanent, and were established in reference to the circumstances as they then existed, and cannot be changed to conform to any altered condition, or circumstances, in the absence of any evidence in the grant that the parties contemplated a shifting boundary or any change in the lines or increase of the area of the lot granted, or to provide for any change in the line or width of the street as the same should be adopted or used by the public. Grants are always to be interpreted in reference to monuments and circumstances existing at the time, and cannot be extended so as to include other lands by implication or by conjecture that possibly had the parties foreseen changes in matters affecting the grant, they might have made it in other or different terms. (Falls Village WaterpowerCo. v. Tibbetts,
The only other question presented by the record is as to the claim of the defendant to an easement in the premises in question. The general rule is, that where the owner of land in a city lays out a street through it and sells lots on each side of the street, the public have an easement of way or right of passage, although it may not become a public highway in the ordinary sense of that term until the dedication is accepted and the street adopted by the corporation, and the grantees of the lots are entitled as purchasers to have the interval or space of ground left open forever as a street, and to the right of using the way for every purpose that may be usual and reasonable for the accommodation of the granted premises. Neither the corporation of the city, or the State authorities, or the grantor can do any act to impair this right or restrict the grantees in the enjoyment of it.
The lot owners having the right to this easement may exclude the owner of the soil himself. (Kirkham v. Sharp, supra; In reTwenty-ninth St., N.Y., 1 Hill, 189.) When land is granted bounded on a street or highway there is an implied covenant that there is such a way, that so far as the grantor is concerned it shall be continued, and that the grantee, his heirs and assigns shall have the benefit of it. (Parker v. Smith,
But it is urged in behalf of the plaintiff that the defendant, by fencing in the locus in quo, abandoned the easement, and that by such abandonment it was extinguished and gone forever. It is not easy to define what acts of the owner of an easement could operate to extinguish the same; but in all cases the act must be judged by the intention indicated by it, and nothing short of an intention to abandon the right will operate to extinguish it, unless other persons have been led by such acts to treat the servient estate as if free of the servitude. In such case the easement could not be resumed without doing injustice to those who have acted upon the faith that it was abandoned, and upon the appearance of abandonment. (Washburn on Easements, 543.) Stokoe v. Singers (8 E. B., 31); Corning v. Gould (16 Wend., 531) and Crain v. Fox (16 Barb., 184), were decided mainly upon the theory of an estoppel, the court in each of the cases laying stress upon the fact that the owners of the easements claimed had, by their acts and the manner in which they had built upon the premises, induced the parties subsequently acquiring title to the servient premises to believe that they were free from the burthen of the easement. But where there has been no change in the title, and parties have not been led to change their position or condition in consequence of the acts of the owner of the easement, and the latter can resume the easement without injury to the rights of any one, he may do so, although he may temporarily cease to use the same, or his acts may be inconsistent with the existence of the easement. (Stokoe v.Singers, supra; Lovell v. Smith, supra.) In this case the act of the defendant in inclosing the locus in quo, must be referred to a purpose other than to abandon the easement. Both parties claimed to be the absolute *75 owners of the land inclosed; the plaintiff claiming that by the change in the line of the street, it was discharged of the easement in favor of the plaintiff in respect to his lot, and of the public; and the defendant claiming that by the same change in the line of the street the boundary line of his lot was upon the line of the street as changed. The inclosure was with a view to the benefits which would result in any controversy that might arise from actual possession, and not with intent to abandon the easement if, in fact, his boundary line was upon the street as originally designated. The inclosure was the result of a mistake as to the limits of his grant, rather than evidence of an intent to abandon the right to a street upon the westerly line and adjoining his lot as the boundary should be finally determined.
It is also claimed in behalf of the plaintiff that the defendant, having taken exclusive possession of the premises in dispute, the judgment should have been without qualification in respect of the easement claimed. In support of this proposition he cites Williams v. N.Y.C. Railroad (
The General Term of the Supreme Court properly modified the judgment at the Circuit by qualifying the right of the plaintiff, who was not entitled to the possession absolutely and divested of the easement of the defendant. A judgment against the defendant, giving the plaintiff as owner in fee an unqualified judgment for the possession, would have been erroneous, and only led to additional litigation, in which *76 neither party could have gained any thing. The judgment appealed from establishes the rights of the parties according to well settled legal principles, and must be affirmed.
As both parties fail in their appeal, the affirmance should be without costs to either party, as against the other, in this court.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.