Douglas v. Athens Masonic Temple Co.

185 N.E.2d 316, 115 Ohio App. 353, 20 Ohio Op. 2d 438, 1961 Ohio App. LEXIS 607
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1961
Docket561
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 N.E.2d 316 (Douglas v. Athens Masonic Temple Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas v. Athens Masonic Temple Co., 185 N.E.2d 316, 115 Ohio App. 353, 20 Ohio Op. 2d 438, 1961 Ohio App. LEXIS 607 (Ohio Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Collier, J.

Charles H. Douglas, the plaintiff-appellant, herein referred to as the plaintiff, brought this action in the Common Pleas Court of Athens County, Ohio, to enjoin The Athens Masonic Temple Company, a corporation, herein designated as the defendant, from interfering with plaintiff’s use of an alleged easement in a 12-foot alley extending from plaintiff’s *354 east boundary line eastwardly a distance of about 70.4 feet to Armory Street in the city of Athens.

After a hearing on the issues joined by the second amended petition and the answer thereto, the trial court denied the injunctive relief sought by the plaintiff. From that judgment the plaintiff has perfected his appeal on questions of law to this court.

The assignments of error are:

1. The court erred in sustaining the defendant’s motion for an order requiring the plaintiff to separately state and consecutively number the alleged causes of action set forth in the petition, which motion was filed December 22, 1959.

2. The judgment of the court is contrary to law and is against the weight of the evidence.

3. Other errors of law apparent in the record.

Plaintiff, in his original petition, based his right to an easement on both a grant and by prescription. Defendant’s motion to require the plaintiff to separately state and number his two alleged causes of action was sustained. Plaintiff, in his first cause of action of his amended petition, alleged his right to an easement in such alley by grant and in his second cause of action, after incorporating his entire first cause of action therein, alleged his right to an easement in the alley by prescription. Defendant’s motion to strike the amended petition from the files, for the reason that the order of the court requiring plaintiff to separately state and number his separate causes of action had not been complied with, was sustained. In his second amended petition, the plaintiff, in his first cause of action, claims an easement in the alley by grant and, in his second cause of action, claims damages in the sum of $5,000. The second amended petition contains no averment of plaintiff’s right to an easement in the alley by prescription. This claim, alleged in the earlier pleadings, was obviously abandoned in the last petition filed by the plaintiff. The plaintiff was not denied the full right to plead such claim.

Whether the trial court erred in sustaining defendant’s motions to plaintiff’s petition and amended petition is of no consequence since the plaintiff chose to abandon his claim to an easement in the alley by prescription. This procedure by the plaintiff renders unnecessary a decision by this court on the first *355 assignment of error. In the case of Grimm v. Modest, 135 Ohio St., 275, it was held that “the substitution of an amended petition for an earlier one ordinarily constitutes an abandonment of the earlier pleading and a reliance upon the amended one.”

Was the judgment of the trial court contrary to law or against the weight of the evidence? The real estate owned by the plaintiff and defendant is located in the northeast quarter of inlot No. 518 in the city of Athens and was acquired by grant from a common owner. The defendant’s eastern boundary line extends from the northeast corner of inlot No. 518, south a dis-stance of 86 feet along the line of Armory Street, thence west 70.4 feet, thence north 86 feet to the northern boundary line of inlot No. 518, and thence east 70.4 feet to the place of beginning.

The plaintiff’s land adjoins defendant’s land on the west the entire length thereof; they share a common east-west boundary line a distance of 86 feet. Plaintiff’s southern boundary line, beginning at his eastern boundary line, is an extension of defendant’s southern boundary line for a distance of 214.4 feet west to the west line of inlot No. 518 on North Congress Street. The common owner from whom the parties acquired title and his predecessors in title for many years held by grant in their various deeds of conveyance as an appurtenance and a part of the premises conveyed a right to pass along and over the alley extending along the southern boundary line of the land now owned by plaintiff and defendant and extending the entire distance across inlot No. 518 from Armory Street on the east side to North Congress Street.on the west side thereof, a total distance of 284.8 feet.

The deed by which plaintiff acquired title to his land, dated October 11, 1939, from Earl T. Dailey and wife, after describing the real estate conveyed, includes this description of an easement in the alley:

‘ ‘ Also the right-of-way to pass over and across for the purposes of an alley described as follows: beginning 86 feet south of the northwest corner of inlot No. 518, thence east 214.4 feet; thence south 6 feet; thence west -214.4 feet; thence north 6 feet to the place of beginning.”

It will be noted from this description that plaintiff was not granted an easement in the alley the entire distance across inlot No. 518, but only 214.4 feet from his east boundary line to the *356 west side thereof, thus excluding plaintiff’s right to use the eastern end of the alley, the 70.4 feet extending along the southern boundary of defendant’s land from the common east-west boundary line of the parties to Armory Street. In other words, by this deed, plaintiff was granted permission to use the alley for ingress and egress to and from his east boundary line to and from North Congress Street on the west side of inlot No. 518, but no express right to use the 70.4 feet from his eastern boundary line to Armory Street on the east side of inlot No. 518 was granted in the deed.

Plaintiff claims a right-of-way over the alley from his boundary line to Armory Street by implied grant and contends that, even though his deed of conveyance does not expressly contain such grant, the same is implied by reason of the fact that the common owner from whom the parties derived title to their separate tracts of land held such easement by grant from prior owners.

The defendant contends that the plaintiff has no greater right to use the alley than that described in his deed, and that the language of the deed is clear, definite and unambiguous and, therefore, not subject to construction.

Plaintiff relies upon the principle, first announced in Ohio in the case of Morgan v. Mason, 20 Ohio, 401, which, briefly stated, is that, when land is conveyed by the owner thereof, everything belonging to and in use for the land, as an incident or appurtenance, passes with the land without any mention being made of such appurtenance. As stated in the opinion in the Morgan case, “it is implied from the nature of the grant, unless it contains some restrictions, that the grantee shall possess the house in the manner, and with the same beneficial rights as were then in use and belonged to it.”

The deed by which plaintiff acquired title does contain one restriction. The right-of-way over the alley from his east boundary line to Armory Street, which his grantor owned, was not expressly granted therein to the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
185 N.E.2d 316, 115 Ohio App. 353, 20 Ohio Op. 2d 438, 1961 Ohio App. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-athens-masonic-temple-co-ohioctapp-1961.