68 Vt. 128 | Vt. | 1896
The court below lound that in February, 1851, Lewis Tait became the owner of the adjoining lands now owned respectively by the plaintiff and defendants. On the 9th of September, 1852, by warranty deed, he conveyed the plaintiff’s farm to R. C. Gale, making no express reservation of a right of way across the same. Through .successive conveyances, the title to that farm, in November, 1888, passed to Sortwell and Morse, under whom the plaintiff occupies by lease. September 11, 1852, Taft, by warranty deed, conveyed the defendants’ land to Dennis Brittain, making no mention in that deed of any right of way. The title to that land, through successive conveyances, passed to the defendants. For a long time prior to the unity of the title to these lands in Taft, there had been a well-defined way across the Gale farm to the other land, which had been used by the owners of the respective lands in going to and from the same. It is found that this is the
The law is well settled that the necessity does not in any case create the right of way. The necessity is only a circumstance resorted to for the purpose of showing the intention of the parties and raising an implication of£a grant. The deed of the grantor as much creates the way of necessity as it does the way by grant. One is granted in express words and the other only by implication. Nichols v. Luce, 24 Pick. 102, and cases cited; Tracy v. Atherton, 35 Vt. 52.
Upon the facts reported, had Taft’s conveyance of the defendants’ land been first in time, there would have been a grant, by implication, of a right of way over the Gale farm, according to the rule that,
“Upon the severance of a heritage, a grant will be implied of all those continuous and apparent easements which have in fact been used by the owner during the unity, though they had no legal existence as easements.”
Harwood v. Benton et al., 32 Vt. 724, citing Gale and Whately on easements, ch.-5. But the conveyance of the Gale farm was first in time, and the defendants’ counsel argues that when Taft conveyed the defendants’ land he had no right of way across the Gale farm to convey. This must depend upon whether there was an implied reservation of the right of way in Taft’s deed to Gale. We think there was. A reservation as well as a conveyance may exist by implication. In both cases the implication arises from the necessity. For this there is abundant authority. In Bridgman v. Smith, 4 Gray 297, the court said:
“If A conveys land to B, to which B can have access only by passing over other land oí A, a way of necessity passes by the grant. If A conveys land to B, leaving other land of A, to which he can have access only by passing*131 over the land granted, a way of necessity is reserved in the grant.”
In Collins v. Prentice, 15 Conn. 38 :
“It is well settled, as a part of the common law of England, that, if a man having a close, to which he has no access except over his other lands, sell that close, the grantee shall have a way to it, as incident to the grant; for without it, he cannot derive any benefit from the grant. * '* * And although doubts have formerly been expressed upon the subject, it seems now to be as well settled- that, if the grantor had reserved that close to himself, and sold his other lands, a right of way would have been reserved.”
Goddard on Ease., 266, and cases cited; Washburn on Ease. & Ser., 82. . When Taft conveyed to Gale, the servitude was plainly impressed upon the Gale farm and was necessary to the enjoyment of the land now owned by the defendants, so there was an implied reservation of it in that conveyance; for the same reason of necessity it passed, by implication, in the conveyance to Brittain.
Judgment reversed and judgment for the defendants.