A. Hamburger & Sons, Inc. v. Lemboeck

67 P.2d 380, 20 Cal. App. 2d 565, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 844
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1937
DocketCiv. S. C. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 67 P.2d 380 (A. Hamburger & Sons, Inc. v. Lemboeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Hamburger & Sons, Inc. v. Lemboeck, 67 P.2d 380, 20 Cal. App. 2d 565, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 844 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DESMOND, J., pro tem.

In this case the plaintiff, owner of a parcel of real estate fronting in a general southerly direction upon Exposition Boulevard in the city of Los Angeles, sought to have the court recognize by its decree certain easements claimed to exist in and over another parcel, owned by the defendants, adjoining the plaintiff’s land at the rear, and fronting upon Thirty-seventh Place. The court was asked to enjoin the defendants from maintaining upon their own land, this second parcel, a six-foot board fence which had been erected immediately adjacent to the holdings of the plaintiff. The court refused to enjoin the maintenance of this fence, but recognized as easements incidental and appurtenant to an apartment house which had been constructed upon the first parcel, the spaces occupied in the second parcel by a rear basement stairway, a sunken areaway for a basement window, a portion of a stoop or platform at the rear door of the apart *567 ment house, and a fire-escape which overhung the second parcel at the rear of the building. The trial court quieted title in defendants under their cross-complaint as to their premises, except as to the easements mentioned, thereby denying to plaintiff corporation the benefit of certain additional burdens claimed by it as fixed upon defendants’ land, including a way to and from the spaces occupied by stairway, stoop and fire-escape, and the right to use an unoccupied portion of defendants’ rear yard wide enough to meet the requirements of the State Housing Act. Appellant claims that certain findings conflict, that others are not supported by the evidence, that the judgment does not conform to certain findings, and that the court has failed to find upon material issues raised by the pleadings.

We have mentioned two adjoining properties. A third parcel immediately adjoined these two upon the east, extending along Hoover Street the entire distance between Exposition Boulevard and Thuty-seventh Place. We shall refer to the three as parcels one, two and three, in the order in which they have been mentioned above. Max Neft and Paula, his wife, became the owners of all three parcels in the year 1924. In 1925 they completed upon parcel one the erection of a four-story brick apartment house. The rear line of parcel one, sixty feet in length, was broken almost halfway across, measuring to the west, by a rectangular extension running thirty feet to the north. The easements are claimed on territory lying to the west of that extension and north of the main body of parcel one. For an apartment house erected upon an interior lot, the State Housing Act requires that where the building does not exceed forty-eight feet in height, as here, there shall be provided a rear yard eleven feet wide immediately behind the apartment house, extending across the entire width of the lot. (Housing Act, sec. 14.) Section 13 of the same act provides that ‘ ‘ on every interior lot on which an apartment house is hereafter erected at least twenty-five per cent of such lot shall be left unoccupied”. At the time the application for a permit to erect the apartment house was filed, the architect who designed the house submitted a plan, which appears as an exhibit in this case, showing the building as occupying practically all of parcel one except the northerly thirty-foot extension and space for walks on either side of the building; also showing a vacant strip of land running across *568 the lots (parcel one and a portion of parcel two) in the rear of the apartment building, thirteen feet six inches in width, except where the space is interrupted by the rear basement stairway, the stoop and the basement window areaway.

Just before constructing the apartment house on parcel one, Mr. and Mrs. Neft had erected a two-story flat-building on parcel two, fronting immediately upon Thirty-seventh Place. This left a clear space between the two buildings of approximately thirty-five feet. The westerly portion of the rear lot of parcel two, however, had built upon it a two-car stucco garage, erected with the flat-building, and it was necessary, contemplating the immediate construction of the apartment house, to put a jog in the easterly wall of that garage to permit the 13%-foot strip above mentioned to extend over the rear of parcel two, to the full width of parcel one. Difficulty arose in connection with the use of the open space between the two apartment buildings immediately after foreclosures took place under three trust deeds which Mr. and Mrs. Neft had executed. Plaintiff, beneficiary under a trust deed to Title Guarantee and Trust Company, dated March 15, 1927, attaching to parcel one, acquired title thereto on September 8, 1933; defendants, beneficiaries upon a trust deed dated February 17, 1931, attaching to parcel two, acquired their title on September 15, 1933. These same defendants also acquired title to parcel three, under similar foreclosure proceedings, on October 3, 1933. On that date a demand was made upon plaintiff by defendants’ attorney, to “take proper steps to remove the portion of your building encroaching on Lot 4, so that it will not be necessary for me to take any action in connection therewith”. “Lot 4” is the official description of the real estate which we have called parcel two. When the plaintiff failed to remove the encroachments complained of, defendants built the six-foot board fence which has been mentioned approximately on the dividing line between the two properties, effectually barring any approach from the apartment house to any portion of parcel two, but leaving the structural encroachments, stairway, stoop and window areaway, in place, beyond the fence.

We are of the opinion that when Mr. and Mrs. Neft passed title to parcel one under the first trust deed, retaining ownership in parcel two, that such easements as were necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of parcel one as then used *569 passed with the deed. The rule is stated as follows in the syllabus of Cave v. Crafts, 53 Cal. 135: “When the owner of lands divides his property into two parts, granting away one of them, he is taken by implication to include in his grant all such easements in the remaining part as are necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of the part which he grants, in the form which it assumes at the time he transfers it. The purchaser is entitled to the benefit of the easement without any express grant or reservation.” The court in that case relied upon the authority of Lampman v. Milks, 21 N. Y. 505, where the court states that the same principle is in effect whether the grantor be the owner of two tenements or of an entire estate of which he sells a portion. The same ease quotes Phear on Waters, page 73, as follows: “If the grantor has already treated this portion as a separate property, the mode in which he enjoyed it, or suffered it to be enjoyed, affords a very proper indication of what rights over his remaining land he intends to pass as accessory to it.” (See, also, Quinlan v. Noble, 75 Cal. 250 [17 Pac. 69]; Rodemeyer v. Meger, 30 Cal. App. 514 [158 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
67 P.2d 380, 20 Cal. App. 2d 565, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-hamburger-sons-inc-v-lemboeck-calctapp-1937.