Dressler v. Isaacs

343 P.2d 714, 217 Or. 586, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 391
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 343 P.2d 714 (Dressler v. Isaacs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dressler v. Isaacs, 343 P.2d 714, 217 Or. 586, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 391 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, J.

The plaintiffs bring this suit in equity to establish their right to the water of certain springs on the defendants’ lands and to enjoin the defendants from interfering with the plaintiffs’ use of the water and with their efforts to re-establish and maintain a pipeline conveying the water from the defendants’ to the plaintiffs’ lands.

The plaintiffs allege that they are owners of an easement to take and conduct the waters from the springs on the defendants’ lands; that sometime in the latter part of 1951 the defendants wrongfully tore up a portion of the water pipe and prevented the water from flowing to the plaintiffs’ dwelling house.

In addition to the request for a decree quieting their easement interest in the defendants’ land, the plaintiffs pray for $7,000 damages to the water pipe and easement and $5,000 damages caused to the plaintiffs by reason of having .been deprived of the water from the springs. The court denied the relief prayed for and dismissed the complaint.

The plaintiffs rest their claim upon alternative grounds. It is claimed that an appurtenant easement was created in the defendants’ land either as a result of an express grant to the plaintiffs’ predecessor in interest or by an implied grant which arose upon the separation of plaintiffs’ and defendants’ lands into *590 separate tracts by a common grantor, A sketch of the lands involved in the present suit is set out below.

The lands which comprise the alleged dominant and servient parcel originally were owned by J. W. Bybee and were known as the Bybee Ranch. In 1910 Bybee conveyed a parcel of approximately 50 acres in the center of the tract to E. S. Gnthrie. This is indicated on the sketch as the Guthrie tract. The deed to Guthrie expressly reserved to Bybee the developed springs on the Guthrie tract, together with an easement to pipe the water from the springs to the land retained by Bybee. The clause in the deed reserving this interest read as follows:

“Excepting and reserving, however, from the operation of this deed all rights to all developed springs on said property and the right to go through and across the same for all pipe lines now thereon or that may be necessary for the proper use thereof and also the right to go upon the right of way for said pipe line and renew and repair the same at any and all times, it being understood that all pipe *591 line hereafter constructed thereon shall be placed under ground at least 18 inches.”

Bybee took back a purchase money mortgage from Guthrie which was foreclosed in 1933 and Bybee purchased the tract at the foreclosure sale. The union of the dominant and servient estates in Bybee would, of course, destroy the easement. 3 Tiffany, Beal Property (3rd ed), § 822, p 377. However, it is referred to here because of its possible significance in a later conveyance where reference is made to a water right.

It may be noted in passing that the springs involved in the present suit are not located on the so-called Guthrie tract but lie to the west and to the north of that tract, although there is a springhouse on that tract into which the waters from the north and west springs are piped for further distribution.

The next conveyances of importance are those by which the Bybee Banch was divided into two parcels which we shall refer to as the north tract and the south tract. It Avas as a result of these conveyances that the plaintiffs contend their easement was created. The circumstances under which these conveyances were made are as follows. Bybee had died and his heirs wished to dispose of the property. At the time, the Bybee Banch was under the control of the Farm Security Administration and the negotiations for the sale of the ranch were conducted by Mr. Eugene Hampton, supervisor of that agency. In the preliminary negotiations Charles Byan secured an option to purchase the entire ranch. Byan then made arrangements with Boby L. Isaacs and Anna E. Isaacs, his Avife, defendants in this case, whereby Byan would purchase the southerly part of the Bybee Banch and Isaacs would purchase the northerly part of it. Simultaneous conveyances of the respective tracts were made *592 on September 4, 1941. These were identical except that the Isaacs deed described all of the land lying north of a described line and the Ryan deed described the land lying south of that line. (See sketch). Each of the deeds contained the following clause:

“Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining and all improvements, water and water rights appurtenant thereto or reasonably necessary to the use of the real property, and the rents, issues and profits thereof.”

Both of these deeds were prepared under the supervision of Mr. Hampton, the Farm Security Administration supervisor. For approximately one year after the deeds were executed Ryan and Isaacs operated the entire Bybee Ranch as a unit under an oral partnership agreement. Thereafter, Ryan and Isaacs conducted their farming operations separately. In 1945 Ryan sold the south tract to Everett Hotchkiss. In 1947 Arthur, Bessie and Irene Dressier purchased the south tract from Hotchkiss under a land sale contract. A deed pursuant to the contract was executed to the purchasers in November, 1950. Later, Jesse and Gertrude Dressier, plaintiffs in this case, succeeded to the interest of Irene Dressier. Isaacs retained all of the north tract until August, 1952 when he conveyed the parcel described as the Guthrie tract and property lying west and north of the Guthrie tract to Nate Smith and his wife. This embraced all of the parcel referred to as the Guthrie tract and it also included the land upon which the west springs existed. The north springs were on the land retained by Isaacs.

The interference with the water lines which prevented the water from coming to the plaintiffs’ land occurred some time between October and December, *593 1951, at which time the defendants Isaacs were still in possession of the entire northern portion of the Bybee Ranch which had been conveyed to them under their deed of September 4,1941.

We shall first consider the plaintiffs’ contention that the deed from the Bybee heirs to Ryan, conveying the south tract, created in the grantee an easement by express grant. This deed, it will be recalled, conveyed all “appurtenances” and “water and water rights appurtenant thereto or reasonably necessary to the use of the real property.” The identical language is contained in the deed to the north tract. This fact and the ambiguity which arises out of the general nature of the language used in the clause makes it difficult to identify the referent intended by that language.

As observed by the trial judge “this is the general type of language contained in many deeds used generally for the purpose of carrying with the grant of land those appurtenances which have been created in the past and is almost never used with the purpose of creating any new appurtenance or servitude.”

The use of the word “appurtenances” is not sufficient to create an easement under these circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
343 P.2d 714, 217 Or. 586, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dressler-v-isaacs-or-1959.