Bullock v. Phelps

61 A. 589, 27 R.I. 164, 1905 R.I. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 26, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 61 A. 589 (Bullock v. Phelps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullock v. Phelps, 61 A. 589, 27 R.I. 164, 1905 R.I. LEXIS 71 (R.I. 1905).

Opinion

Parkhurst, J.

This was an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, brought by the plaintiff, as owner of a certain tract of land at Watch Hill, R. I., against the defendants; who were owners-of a certain tract of land lying southerly of and next adjacent to the plaintiff’s land, the plaintiff in her declaration alleging in substance that the defendants by their agents and servants broke and entered the close of the plaintiff and tore up the ground, etc., the defendants falsely and maliciously claiming a right of way over the plaintiff’s land and the right to construct a roadway thereover, and in consequence of said acts deprived the plaintiff of the sale of said close to certain persons with whom she was then negotiating, and laying damages at $5,000.

The defendants pleaded:

1. The general issue.

2. A plea of justification by reason of a right of way by prescription.

3. A plea of justification by reason of a general right of way by deed.

4. A plea of justification by reason of a defined right of way by deed.

Issue having been taken upon these pleas, the case was tried before a jury on the 12th day of July, 1904, and resulted in a verdict for the defendants. '

The plaintiff petitions for a new trial, and alleges in her *166 petition ten grounds therefor; but both in the argument and brief for the plaintiff no specific exception or ground is urged, and the case is treated as one resting solely upon the testimony and certain questions of law raised thereon, as follows:

1. Under the second plea, did the defendants have a right of way by prescription as appurtenant to all their land?

2. Under the third plea, did the defendants have a right of way by grant as appurtenant to a part of their land?

3. Under the fourth plea, did the defendants have a right of way by grant as appurtenant to all their land?

There is no dispute- as to title or ownership by the parties in the lands described and claimed by them in the pleadings. The sole dispute concerns a right of way claimed by the defendants and disputed by the plaintiff, by virtue of which right of way the defendants justify their entry upon the land of the plaintiff for the purpose of making repairs.

For convenience, a sketch of the lands of the parties, showing the way in question, is incorporated herewith, the same being taken from a plat filed and used by the plaintiff. (See “ Plaintiff’s Exhibit K, Plat July, 1904.”)

It is undisputed that “lot A,” with a house, barn, and other improvements, was owned by Albert Crandall in 1848, and was part of a farm owned and worked by him; that said Albert Crandall bought from Edward F. Vose, by deed dated February 14, 1865, “lot B,” together with a right of way described in that deed, as follows: “ The said Crandall is to have forever and his heirs and assigns, a right to a convenient passway across the Grantor’s land, past the Fosters’ House, so called, to a highway, at all times, free and unobstructed from the said Crandalk's land.” Lots “A” and “B” with said right of way have come by mesne conveyances to the defendants. “Lot C,” which was formerly owned by said Edward F. Vose,' at the time of the conveyance to Crandall, February 14, 1865, is the lot of land over which the right of way in question passes, and is the property of the plaintiff.

It appears from the testimony that from 1848 down to 1865 the said Crandall used a way northerly from his land (“lot A”) across lots “B” and “C” (Vose’s land), and it sufficiently *167 appears by a chain of witnesses, none of whom is contradicted, that said way was used by Crandall and his servants with carts and other vehicles, oxen, horses, and on foot, for all such purposes as he chose in connection with said “lot A.” That after he purchased “lot B,” in 1865, he and his successors in title continued to use the same way, in the same location over the same land, from the northerly line of “lot B,” and that he moved his wall and gate-posts and gate to the northerly line of “lot B;” that there has never been any change or interruption in the use of the said way, and that the location is the same that it always has been, and so remains down to the present time; and there is no evidence that the use of the said way has ever been forbidden, interrupted, or complained of by anyone until just prior to this suit'.

It is evident that if Crandall and his successors in title had used the way in question from 1848 for twenty years, as appurtenant to “lot A,” and without having purchased “lot B” and the right of way therein described, a right of way would have been acquired by prescription.

(2) But the plaintiff contends that no right of way could be acquired by prescription between 1848 and 1865 (a period of seventeen years) and that by the deed of 1865, purchasing a part of the land over which the way was used, Crandall lost the benefit of the seventeen years which had elapsed, because the easement (even if then acquired) became extinguished by the unity of title and possession in Crandall of the land to which the way was appurtenant and the land over which the way' passed. If this were all, we are of the opinion that such ex-tinguishment would have affected only that part of the way which was upon “lot B” and that the prescriptive time would have gone on as to the remainder of the way over Vose’s land, ■ so that a way from the northerly line of “ lot B ” to the highway would have matured and become vested at the end of twenty years from 1848. We know of no case in which extinguishment of an easement of way has been held to have taken place, where only a portion of the servient estate has been purchased. No such case is cited on the plaintiff's brief.

The case, qited by plaintiff, of Bell v. Ohio, &c., R. R. Co., 64 *168 Am. Dec. 687, to the effect that a person having a right of common appurtenant, who becomes a purchaser or disseizer of part of the land, subject to the easement, thereby loses all his right of common, has no application here, because a right of common being in all and every part of the land, and implying a similar right in others, becomes impossible of enjoyment by a purchaser or disseizer.

But it is unnecessary for us to further discuss this question, because of the construction which we place upon the deed of February 14, 1865.

(1) The plaintiff contends that by the deed of February 14, 1865, whereby Crandall purchased “lot B” with a right of way over the grantor’s land, Crandall obtained only a right of way appurtenant to “lot B.” Under the cases cited by plaintiff this would be true if “lot B” was isolated from “lot A.” It would also be true, if, having already acquired a definite right of way appurtenant to a certain lot of land, he had purchased another lot beyond “lot A” without any express grant of a right of way, because under all the cases, where a right of way is fixed and certain, no additional burden can be imposed upon the servient estate by reason of the purchase of additional land, unless by express grant or prescription.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 589, 27 R.I. 164, 1905 R.I. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullock-v-phelps-ri-1905.