42 Minn. 398 | Minn. | 1890
In 1870 one Mattison owned a tract of land in the city of Minneapolis, 90 feet front upon Fourth street, extending south Í57 feet, beside First avenue, to a public alley which ran east and west parallel with Fourth street. December 6th of that year Mattison sold and conveyed to one Cleator a piece off from the north end ’of said tract, 33 feet wide on the avenue and 90 feet in length along the street, according to the description, by metes and bounds, in the deed, “excepting and reserving therefrom a strip of land 10 feet wide and 33 feet long across the rear or inner end of said 90 feet for an alley.” It will be seen that this excepted and reserved strip extended, at right angles, from the street to the tract of land retained . by Mattison. Two days later Mattison sold and conveyed this entire tract, with all its hereditaments and appurtenances, to Town and Grimshaw. It was described as 90 feet wide and 124 feet long. No mention was made of the alley,-reserved and excepted in the Cleator deed, in this conveyance, nor in any of the conveyances which followed, save as hereinafter stated. Town and Grimshaw subdivided their purchase into five separate parcels fronting upon the avenue. The first sold, that lying beside the Cleator lot, was described as 80 feet deep only; but in all subsequent conveyances the parcels were each described, by metes and bounds, as 90 feet deep, with a reservation and exception in each deed, substantially the same as that in the deed to Cleator. The latter erected a building abutting upon the alleged alley, on his lot, soon after buying the same. He sold to defendant in the year 1882, the description in the conveyance being identical with that found in the deed from his grantor, including the reservation and exception. From the time of the first actual occupancy of any part of the original tract (by Cleator) down to within a few days prior to the commencement of this action, all of the owners and occupants of the entire premises, for the time being, including
The defendant contends that the words of the deed from Mattison to Cleator, hereinbefore quoted, must be held an express exception of the strip 10 feet wide, instead of a reservation; that therefore hiattison retained and held the title in fee, and simply agreed with his grantee that the same should not be put to any other use than for an alley, thus ensuring to Cleator light, air, and such other benefits as would naturally accrue to him as the owner of the tract in front and abutting thereon. And that as land is never appurtenant to land, Town and Grimshaw acquired no easement therein through their deed from Mattison of the adjacent estate. If, however, the language found in the deed to Cleator should be construed as a reservation instead of an exception, defendant insists that there was created nothing more than a right of way in gross, that is, a personal right to Mattison and to him alone, which was not and could not have been assigned or conveyed to his grantees. And further, that if it be held an exception, the title remaining in Mattison, or be held a reservation in gross to him, the fee passing to Cleator, Mattison’s estate or interests have been determined and terminated by defendant’s title acquired under the tax laws.
1. The words “excepting” and “reserving” are used so indiscrim
Whether the thing granted be an easement in land, or the land itself, may depend upon the nature and use of the thing granted. If it be non-eontinuous, or to be used only occasionally, like a way, a reasonable interpretation of the grant is that only an incorporeal hereditament is created, an easement in the land. Jamaica Pond Aqueduct Co. v. Chandler, 9 Allen, 159. Whether a right of way is embraced in a deed is always a question of construction of the deed, having reference to its terms and the practical incidents belonging to the grantor of the land at the time of the conveyance. Hutte
2. It is competent for one who is the grantor of an estate to create a right of way over it in his own favor, either appurtenant to his other lands, or in gross, (that is, strictly personal,) by a reservation thereof inserted in his deed; or it may be done, though in terms it be an exception. Washb. Easements, *21. A way reserved, as the word is used in a popular sense, is strictly an easement newly created by way of a grant from the grantee in the deed of the estate, to the grantor. Id. *20; 3 Washb. Real Prop. (5th Ed.) 465. But a grant in gross is never presumed when it can fairly be construed as appurtenant to some other. estate. Washb. Easements, *29, *161. And, to declare it appurtenant, there must be two distinct tenements, the dominant, to which the right belongs, and the servient, upon which the burden or obligation rests. When there is in the deed of conveyance no declaration of the intention of the parties' in regard to the nature of the way, it will be determined by its relation to other estates of the grantor, or its want of such relation. The terminus ad quern is of especial significance. Dennis v. Wilson, 107 Mass. 591, and cases cited. In partition of land, with permission for a way over one tract for the use of the owner of another, the right would be taken and presumed to be appurtenant. Bowen v. Conner, 6 Cush. 132. It is difficult to see, as was remarked in Dennis v. Wilson, how a division of the entire tract by a deed of part from a sole owner, with a like provision for a way, can receive any different construction. We also have a practical interpretation of the reservation, by Cleator, the grantee. He immediately built with reference to the alleged alley, abutting his building upon it. For over twelve years thereafter — so long as he owned the premises — he used this strip
And we also have a right to examine the circumstances surrounding the transaction, in order to discover the intent of the parties. It is obvious that when Mattison sold to Cleator he had determined to change the facing of his tract of land from the street on the north to the avenue on the east of it, or he would not have disposed of the entire street front. It is also plain from the narrowness of the lot purchased by Cleator, and other circumstances in the case, that the tract had become, or was about to become, business property, in the rear of which an alley was almost indispensable. The change of front had necessarily cut off the greater part of the tract, should it be used for business purposes, from the public alley on the south. The excepted and reserved strip came to and connected Mattison’s estate with the street, and, if appendant, was a most important privilege. And from the fact that two days thereafter Mattison sold and conveyed all that remained of his original holding, we may safely infer that he contemplated a sale of the balance when he executed the deed in dispute. If this be a fair and permissible inference, it would seem to follow almost conclusively that it was not Mattison’s intention to retain, by reservation or exception, so valueless a privilege as a right in gross to this cul.de sac would have been — a right of way personal solely, not to be exercised in connection with other lands, and which was non-assignable. It is impossible to see what interest Mattison would have had in reserving away over Cleator’s lot, unless made appurtenant to the balance of his tract. He had no present use for it, as the premises were not then and never had been occupied by him. But the importance of the way as appurtenant and appendant to the estate which remained, to enhance the value because greatly beneficial, needs no-demonstration. The exception and reservation in the conveyance to Cleator was designed to and did create and constitute an affirmative easement to the tract of land on which it terminated, which ran with the land and passed to Mattison’s vendees. Kent v. Waite, 10 Pick. 138; Dennis v. Wilson, supra; Peck v. Conway, 119 Mass. 546; Winthrop v. Fairbanks, 41 Me. 307;
3. In addition to other defences, the appellant alleged in his answer that under and by virtue of certain proceedings to enforce the collection of taxes against the premises owned by him, viz., the tract 33 by 90 feet, for the years 1882 and 1883, and sales therein, he had acquired two separate and distinct tax titles to the same, and had thereby become the owner in fee of said premises, free and clear of all incumbrances, liens, and easements. To this part of the answer a general demurrer was interposed and sustained, the defendant appealing. This appeal was pending here when the case was tried in the district court upon the facts remaining in issue by the pleadings, and has been argued and submitted with that from an order refusing a new trial.
The demurrer was properly sustained. Under the tax laws the owner of real property is permitted to purchase the same at a tax sale, and may afterward rely upon his tax title or his antecedent title, or both, except as against a right, title, interest, lien or incumbrance which he is legally or equitably bound to protect as against taxes and tax sales. Gen. St. 1878, c. 11, § 87; Branham v. Bezanson, 33 Minn. 49, (21 N. W. Rep. 861.)
The appellant contends that if an easement appurtenant existed in his land, the plaintiffs should have protected their interests by a payment of the taxes against the alley-way. Exactly how this could have been done is not suggested. The easement is an incorporeal hereditament and not taxable. The strip used for alley purposes seems to have been assessed with the balance of the tract described in appellant’s deed and to which he held the fee, and properly so, for there was but one parcel or lot of land. It may be stated as a general proposition, thoroughly established by the authorities, that whenever a party holds such a relation to the land or its owner, whether by express contract or implication of the law arising on such relation, .that it is his duty to pay the taxes, he cannot allow the land to be sold for the taxes, become the purchaser, and thus build up a title on his own neglect of duty. Show the existence of the duty, and the disqualification is made out in every instance. Cooley, Tax’n, 345;
The legal relation existing between the owners of the two estates, the dominant and the servient, arising out of the easement, made it defendant’s duty to pay' these taxes. His purchases therefore were but a payment, and inured to respondents’ benefit. '
Both orders affirmed.