Boynton v. Strauss

33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 229, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 348
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1 (Boynton v. Strauss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boynton v. Strauss, 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 229, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 348 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

The facts as disclosed in evidence before ns show that the plaintiff purchased from Max Strauss, one of the defendants, [2]*2the north half, substantially, of a parcel of land owned by Mr. Strauss on the west side of Washington avenue, in the city of Elyria, and in making that purchase a stipulation was contained in the instrument of conveyance concerning the joint use of a driveway. The driveway may perhaps be regarded as either a horseshoe carriage way, starting in at Washington avenue and going around to the rear of the premises and back again to Washington avenue by another entrance, or it may be regarded as being two driveways.

Nearly all of this horseshoe driveway is located upon the premises which the vendor retained, the south half of the entire parcel of land. It begins near the boundary line between the portion which he retained and the portion which he sold to the plaintiff; continues in a serpentine course westward, crossing the boundary line part way to the rear of the premises; continues on the part that was sold to the plaintiff and then crosses the boundary line between the parties and circles around the defendant’s house, returning again to Washington avenue.

At the time of the sale and since the sale these two driveways (if they were two), or one driveway, if it be so regarded, constituted a means of continuous passage from either entrance on Washington avenue around to the other entrance or exit on the same street.

It should be said that at the time of the sale there were two houses upon the entire parcel, two residences, the south one of which is occupied still by the vendor, Mr. Strauss, the defendant here, or his family, he having since conveyed it by gift to his son, who lives with him; and the house upon the northern portion of the entire piece of land is now occupied by the plaintiff, the vendee, who purchased that portion of the premises from the defendant.

The provision in the deed upon this subject of the driveway is quite extensive and I shall quote it in full, because it is necessary to construe the language:

“The drive or carriage way to remain as now existing and located, a part of which passes from Washington avenue to the land of the grantor lying south of the land above described and thereby conveyed and for a short distance on said grantor’s land when the said drive or carriage way passes on the land hereby [3]*3conveyed to said grantee, to be used in common between tbe two places for a carriage or driveway, and said grantor conveys to said grantee said use of tbe parcel on Ms land covered by said driveway south of that hereby conveyed, and reserves the right to use for passage and repassage the remaining portion of said driveway on the land hereby conveyed. The corners of said driveway at Washington avenue to be marked by stones or iron piping sunk in the ground, as also the Washington avenue corners of the lot hereby conveyed with the corner on the east line one hundred feet north of the south line as above described.”

Now the controversy which makes necessary a construction of this language is substantially this: For a long period after the conveyance was made the parties and those who did business with them seem to have used indifferently the whole or such part of this driveway or parts of it as they chose. The plaintiff, after he purchased the northern half of the property, built a barn in the rear of the residence thereon and in the construction of that barn the wagons by which the material was hauled were accustomed to pass over that part of the driveway which lies south of the Strauss land and across the boundary line between the two parties over into the parcel which the defendant sold to the plaintiff and on which the new barn was being constructed. Delivery men and others have used the entire driveway, if they chose to do so, making the complete circuit of the horseshoe. At the time the conveyance was made, it should be stated that there was no means, convenient at least, for anyone to drive in at one entrance and turn around so as to come out at the same entrance. Certainly there was no such place or means convenient to be used upon the plaintiff’s portion of the entire tract. Since that time he has in front of his barn, provided a suitable place for turning around, so that one may drive on that part of the driveway between the two houses coming in at Washington avenue and drive up to the plaintiff’s barn and turn around and come out again by the same way.

It is urged on behalf of the plaintiff, who claims still the right to make the complete circuit, that he has an easement in the entire horseshoe driveway, or of all that part of it, being the major part, of course, which is located upon the vendor’s land, which Mr. Strauss’ son still owns, and Mr. Strauss having seen fit, for purposes of his own, to block up the southernmost por[4]*4tion of that driveway so that it can not now be used, this action is brought to vindicate the plaintiff’s alleged right to use by way of easement appurtenant to the land purchased by him the entire horseshoe driveway. It is vigorously claimed in his behalf that such use of the entire driveway physically connected with the residence property which he purchased from the defendant would, as a matter of law, and as an easement appurtenant to the land purchased, pass to him when he bought, and that such was his common law right under the circumstances as they then existed.

But we need not give consideration to that contention, for, as we look at it, the parties have themselves attempted to define in this instrument of conveyance precisely and exactly what their rights are. They have not left them unexpressed, and to the determination of the law as it may be applicable to the physical facts and the circumstances of the parties and their relations, but they have attempted to define them, and that definition supersedes whatever common law rights might have existed if they had given no such expression to their intention. The deed of conveyance, it may be remarked, was written, by the purchaser, the plaintiff, as the scrivener. He dictated that part of it which I have read and quoted, to a stenographer, who as he dictated it, wrote it upon a typewriter (for that portion of the deed is in typewriting), and directly thereafter he or some one in the presence of both the vendor and the vendee read it to Mr. Strauss, the vendor, and it was thereupon signed, witnessed, and acknowledged and by the plaintiff put upon record.

It is claimed that if this deed and the express provisions with regard to the driveway therein contained are insufficient to support the claim made by the plaintiff of an easement in the entire driveway, the complete circuit or horseshoe, he is entitled to a decree upon the evidence here to reform the deed in such manner as that it will definitely and clearly express the intention which he claims to have been the mutual intention expressed between the parties in the negotiations leading up to the purchase.

Upon that subject the testimony is somewhat conflicting. The plaintiff testifies that in the conversation leading up to the purchase between him and the defendant, the vendor, mention [5]

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Bluebook (online)
33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 1, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 229, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boynton-v-strauss-ohcirctcuyahoga-1908.