Glenn v. Davis

35 Md. 208, 1872 Md. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 35 Md. 208 (Glenn v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. Davis, 35 Md. 208, 1872 Md. LEXIS 19 (Md. 1872).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore city, passed upon bill, answer and proofs, confirming and continuing, with certain modifications, an injunction before issued; restraining and prohibiting the appellant from removing an alleged partition wall, between the premises owned by him, and those contiguous thereto owned by the [212]*212appellees, on the north side of Baltimore street, between Charles and St. Paul streets, in the city of Baltimore.

It appears from the record that in 1823, Frederick AYaesche owned both parcels of ground; and by deed dated the 18th day of March, 1823, conveyed the easternmost lot to Charles G. Boehm, under whom the appellant claims; and by deed dated the 6th of January, 1825, conveyed the other or westernmost lot to Samuel Sweetser, under whom the appellees claim.

The deed from AYaesche to Boehm contains the following provisions: “ Reserving however to the' said Frederick AYaesche, his heirs and assigns, the use and benefit, in common with the said Charles G. Boehm, his heirs and assigns, of the alley, of the width of three feet or thereabout, and extending back about forty-five feet, as the same is now opened, between the house erected on the ground above described, and the house of said Frederick AYaesche to the westward thereof, and adjoining thereto. It being the understanding and agreement of the said parties hereto of the first and third parts, that the present dividing and partition wall or walls between the said houses, shall, notwithstanding a deviation of the said wall or walls from the true dividing line between the ground above described, and the adjoining ground of the said AYaesche, remain undisturbed, so long as the said houses shall endure.” The subsequent deed from AYaesche to Sweetser contained the same provision mutatis mutandis, with respect to the wall, and the use of the alley.

At the time of the deed to Boehm, there stood upon the lots two dwelling houses, separated to the height of the first story, by an alley about three feet wide, by which access was gained to the back yards of the two houses; and above that, by a wall nine inches thick. The second story of the westernmost house extending over the alley to this nine inch wall, which was the west wall of the easternmost house; being the dividing or partition wall referred to in the deeds.

[213]*213We consider it very clearly established by the evidence of the surveyors, and the plats showing by actual measurement the location of the lots described in the deeds from Waesche to Boehm and to Sweetser, that the wall in question is wholly within the lines of the lot conveyed to Boehm, and stands upon the ground owned by the appellant. The' deeds themselves recognize a probable deviation of the dividing wall from the true dividing line between the lots, and contemplate an adjustment of the same at some future time. This the appellant now claims the right to do; and was about to pull down his old house and remove the nine inch wall, for the purpose of building on his lot a large and substantial warehouse, of a style and character which he considers suitable to the place and commensurate with the present value of the property. This right is denied by the appellees, who insist that the old dividing wall which still forms the eastern wall of their house shall remain undisturbed.

One of the grounds relied on in their bill of complaint, is that their title being derived under certain proceedings in a Court of Chancery, for the partition of the estate of William Wilkins, to which the appellant was a party; he is thereby precluded and estopped from denying their title to the whole lot of ground with the improvements thereon as it had been held and occupied, extending to and including the use of the dividing wall in question. In our opinion there is nothing appearing in the chancery proceedings to support this position. The appellant is not seeking to impugn the title of the appellees to the property acquired by them under the partition; they took thereby the lot of ground which had been conveyed by Waesche to Sweetser, with the same right to have the east wall continued as an easement on the land of the adjoining proprietor, which Waesche retained under his deed to Boehm. The appellant, having acquired title to the lot conveyed to Boehm, is not estopped from maintaining, either that by subsequent agreement or acts of the parties interested, the easement has been extinguished or abandoned; [214]*214or that by the true construction of Waesehe’s deed it has ceased to exist. These were the conditions belonging to, and inherent in the title acquired by the appellees under the partition, and it is therefore no impeachment of their title, for the appellant to insist that these conditions shall be enforced. He is not setting up a title adverse to that acquired by the appellees under the partition; but on the contrary quite consistent with it, if his theory be correct. The cases of Funk vs. Newcomer, 10 Md., 316; Alexander vs. Walter, 8 Gill, 251, and Stallings vs. Ruby’s Lessee, 27 Md., 156, cited by the appellees, have therefore no application to this case.

It is very clear that by the clause in the deed to which we have referred, the grantor Waesche, notwithstanding the lines of the property conveyed included the wall in question and a portion of the alley, reserved the right to the use of the alley in common, and the right to have the wall continued undisturbed, “ so long as the two houses should endure.” These easements, created for the benefit of his own lot, passed to Sweetser under his deed in 1825. We agree with the Judge of the Circuit Court in the opinion, that the contract made on the 10th day of April, 1839, between Boehm and P. S. & J. G. Chappell, is not binding upon the appellees. The contract is inartificially drawn and somewhat obscure in its terms; but we think it is susceptible of easy construction, and if this were a case arising between the parties by whom it was made, we should have little difficulty in understanding and enforcing its provisions. But the appellees here do not claim title under the Chappells. At the time the contract was made, P. S. & J. G. Chappell held the westernmost lot as lessees for ninety-nine years, renewable, under a lease from Keener and wife, who in 1837 had conveyed the reversion in fee to Achsah Wilkins, Joseph Wilkins and John Glenn, executors of William Wilkins, deceased, under whom the appellees claim. It does not appear that these parties holding the reversion at the time the contract was made, were in any manner parties to it, or had [215]*215any notice of it, actual or constructive. As the paper was not entitled by law to be recorded, placing it upon record could not, of course, operate as constructive notice.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Md. 208, 1872 Md. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-davis-md-1872.