72 N.J.L. 94 | N.J. | 1905
The opinion of the court was delivered by
We agree with the learned trial judge that the effect of tire deed of 1839 was to cut off any right the plaintiffs might otherwise have had to cross the land thereby conveyed.
We assume that the railroad company had dedicated a crossing at Sixth street; that that street, as well as Now Jersey Railroad avenue, have been obstructed by the defendant, and that the plaintiffs’ rights in the latter have not been barred by adverse possession. These facts must have been found by the jury to justify their verdict, and we do not think it necessary to review the evidence.
1. The first question is settled adversely to the plaintiffs. H. B. Anthony Shoe Co. v. West Jersey Railroad Co., 12 Dick. Ch. Rep. 607.
It was there held that the injury sustained by the owner of land immediately abutting upon a public highway from an obstruction of the street was not different in character from that which every other citizen sustains. A fortiori, the injury sustained by those who are not abutting owners, as in the present case, is not different in character from that of the public, and cannot be redressed by a private action for damages.
2. We think there was error in holding that the plaintiffs had a private right of way in New Jersey Railroad avenue. The fee-simple of tire land, prior to the deed of 1885, had been in the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title, and an easement of w’ay in favor of their other land would have no legal existence during the continuance of the unity of seisin of both tracts. Fetters v. Humphreys, 4 C. E. Gr. 471, 476.
The reasons which have led the courts to hold that the grantees of lots shown on a map are entitled to an easement in the streets delineated thereon as distinguished from tire public right arising from the dedication, are not applicable to the owners of the fee. The right of the grantees rests either upon an implied covenant or upon -the principle of estoppel. Clark v. Elizabeth, 11 Vroom 172, 175.
But neither the theory of an implied covenant nor the principle of estoppel arc applicable where the owner of the dominant and servient tenements are the same person. Until the severance of the title in 1885, the easement could have no existence
The deed of 1885 conveyed lots bounded on the street, and by legal presumption embraced the street to its centre. Salter v. Jonas, 10 Vroom 469.
An easement of way is not an apparent and continuous easement and does not pass upon the severance of the tenement, unless it is a way of necessity or tire operative words of the conveyance are sufficient to grant it de novo. Fetters v. Humphreys, 4 C. E. Gr. 471.
The exception of a way of necessity has no application to the present case. At the time of the conveyance to the railroad company, in 1885, the plaintiffs had access to their property by several other streets, which were not vacated until 1888, and -then seemingly with the .consent of the plaintiffs and upon a sale of a portion of their land to a steel company for a purpose which rendered such vacation necessary. No use seems to have been made by them at airy time of New Jersey Railroad avenue.
The other exception mentioned in Fetters v. Humphreys is the case where the words of the conveyance are sufficient to grant the easement de novo.
Although the opinion refers only to cases of grant, the same rule is applicable to a reservation.. In Booraem v. North Hudson County Railroad Co., 13 Stew. Eq. 557, the way was held to have been reserved in favor of the grantor, and in White v. Tidewater Oil Co., 5 Dick. Ch. Rep. 1, it was necessarjr to the decision to hold that the complainant not only acquired a right in. the portion of the street convej^ed to him, but also reserved a right -in the portion conveyed by him.
The solution of this question depends upon the language of the deed. In the Booraem case there were express words in the deed which operated as a dedication of the street in favor of the gi’antor; the land was conveyed subject to the easement of Ogden avenue, and tírese wox*ds were added: “It being understood that Ogden avenue is extended for the same width across said premises and dedicated as a public highway."
.In White v. Tidewater Oil Company the question arose upon demurrer to a bill which charged that the purpose of
The deed of 1885 is to be read in view of the situation of the lands and the parties at the time it was made. Cooper v. Louanstein, 10 Stew. Eq. 284, 301. An ejectment suit was pending, the object of which was to oust the railroad company from the possession of a portion of the land conveyed and the southerly half of the avenue on which it abutted. The plaintiffs claimed that the railroad company had encroached upon tlie avenue and upon the abutting lands of the plaintiffs by laying tracks thereon. In settlement of this suit the railroad company paid $7,000 and took a conveyance of the land in question, and something more. The very object of the conveyance seems to have been to relieve the railroad company from liability to action by reason of its occupation of the avenue. Under such circumstances it requires clear language in the deed to lead to a construction which would reserve a right of way to the grantors in favor of lots on other streets to which there were at the time other and more direct means of access. The only language relied upon is the reference to: New Jersey Railroad avenue as a boundary. This reference, however, indicates that the parties regarded it as a public street rather than as a private way.
We think the reference in the deed merely recognizes New Jersey Railroad avenue as an existing public street, and was not meant to work a reservation of a private right on the part of the plaintiffs. The public right ended with the vacation of the street in 1895.
The rule to show cause must be made absolute.