This аction was brought to compel the defendants to raise certain power lines and to obtain a declaration of the rights of the parties under an instrument granting to the city the right to maintain the wires above plaintiff’s land. The grant gives the city a right of way across the land “with the right to erect and maintain poles with all necessary wires and fixtures thereon, and to keep same free from foliage . . . [and to] have access to said right of way . . . for purposes of repairs. ...” The instrument is printed save for the phrase “for aerial only,” which appears in handwriting near one margin. The grant does not specify the location of the wires or the height at which they should be carried. The lines were installed at a height of 51% feet above the ground and were supported by poles erected оn adjoining property. From the time the easement was granted until the present dispute arose, a period of 17 years, the transmission lines were maintained at that level without objection.
Plaintiff’s property has been used at all times here involved as a storage yard for pipe, and cranes were employed to move the pipe about the premises and to load and unload trucks and cars. In 1946, in order to store pipe at a greater elevation than before, plaintiff acquired a new type of crane which could reach to a height of 61 feet above the ground. While being used on parts of the land below the power lines, the crane came into contact with the wires, and an electrical current was discharged into it. This action was filed on June 10,1947, follоwing a refusal by the city to raise its lines unless plaintiff would pay the cost.
After the action was filed and prior to the trial, the crane struck the wires a second timе, and the parties then agreed that defendants should immediately raise the power lines and that the allocation of costs incurred in moving them should be madе by the court. Pursuant to the agreement the city raised the power lines to an altitude sufficient to obviate- any interference with plaintiff’s operations.
Thе trial court found and concluded that the exercise by defendants of their rights under the grant for a period of 17 years, with the acquiescence of the serviеnt owners, gave defendants a fixed and definite right to maintain wires at a height of 51% feet. The court also concluded that defendants acquired a prescriptive right to keep the lines at that level.
Defendants were awarded the sum of $988.78, the amount expended by them in raising the wires. The judgment de
It is clear that the court erred in concluding that the city had acquired a prescriptive right to maintаin its wires at a height of 51% feet. The wires were installed under the grant, and there is no evidence of an actionable interference with plaintiff’s use of the underlying рroperty or of any conduct openly hostile to its title prior to the time the dispute arose in 1946. The city did not, therefore, obtain a right to maintain its lines at that level by prescription. (See
Pabst
v.
Finmand,
It is well settled that if the location of a right оf way is not defined by the grant, a reasonably convenient and suitable way is presumed to be intended, and the right cannot be exercised over the whole of thе land. (See 3 Tiffany, Real Property (1939) p. 328;
Winslow
v.
City of Vallejo,
Plaintiff argues that the phrase “for aerial oMy” restricts the grant in such a manner that the foregoing rules should not be applied in the present ease. It contends that by use of the phrase the parties showed an intention to create a right of way which could not becomе fixed by use but could be changed at any time to accommodate the reasonable requirements of the owner of the underlying land. The parties, of course, could have made such an agreement, but it is clear that they did not do so here. We agree with the trial court that the words “for aerial only” do not have the effect claimed by plaintiff, but mean instead that defendants shall have no right to install underground conduits or to erect poles or other fixtures on plaintiff’s land. The general rules relating to fixing the location of easements are applicable, and the city acquired a right to maintain its power lines at a hеight of 51 Yz feet by reason of the grant and the acquiescence in the exercise of the right of way at that level for 17 years. Accordingly, plaintiff must bear the expense of raising the wires.
The portion of the judgment which declares that the defendants have a right to maintain the power lines at their present level, а height in excess of 61 feet, is entirely proper, since the parties have relocated the right of way at the new level by agreement. Nothing in the agreement changed any of the terms of the grant, and the rights of the dominant owner are the same as they were at the old location. (See
Wallace Ranch W. Co.
v.
Foothill D. Co.,
By the terms of the grant the city was expressly given a right of access to make repairs and to clear away foliage, and this right is not, as contended by plaintiff, in any way in
As thus modified, the judgment is affirmed. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
