Hayden v. Dutcher

31 N.J. Eq. 217
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 N.J. Eq. 217 (Hayden v. Dutcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayden v. Dutcher, 31 N.J. Eq. 217 (N.J. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor.

The decision of this case involves the solution of a single problem: Is the doctrine of the common law of England, in respect to the acquisition of an easement in light and air by adverse user, in force in this state ?

The complainant seeks to have the defendant enjoined from erecting a wall on his own land, which will effectually close up and render useless eighteen windows in the complainant’s building, overlooking the defendant’s garden. The lands are situate in the city of Newark. Though the answer denies the fact, it will be assumed, for present purposes, that the complainant’s windows have existed, just as they now are, for more than twenty years prior to the commencement of this suit, and that the complainant, and those under whom he claims, have used and enjoyed them continuously, under a claim of right, without dispute, for for the whole of that period. The case made by the bill, puts the complainant’s right to the easement in question distinctly and exclusively on the ground of adverse user. The pleadings show that the estates, which, it is contended, hold to each other the relation of dominant and servient, originated in distinct and perfectly independent sources of title'; the case, therefore, stands free from any claim of right to a servitude arising by implication.

There are cases, both ancient and modern, which adjudge that an easement of the character under consideration may be created by an implied covenant. It was said, in Palmer v. Fletcher, 1 Lev. 122, decided in 1675: “If I have a house with certain lights in it, and lands adjoining, and I sell the house, but keep the land adjoining, neither I, nor any one [219]*219claiming under me, can obstruct the lights by building on the land I retained, for, by selling the house, I sell an easement in the lights also.” And Chief-Justice Holt, in 1705, in referring to Palmer v. Fletcher, when pronouncing judgment in Tenant v. Goldwin, 2 Ld. Raym. 1093, said: “ But, if I had sold the vacant piece of ground and kept the house, without reserving the benefit of the lights, my vendee might build against my house. But, in the other case, where I sell the house, the vacant piece of ground is by that grant charged with the lights.”

It would seem to be unquestionably just that such an implication should be made whenever the easement is necessary to the full use and beneficial enjoyment of the thing granted. The validity of an easement thus created was recognized in Story v. Odin, 12 Mass. 157; United States v. Appleton, 1 Sumn. 502. The pertinent maxims are: “ Ho man shall derogate from his own grant,” and “Whoever grants a thing, shall be understood to grant, also, whatever is indispensable to the full beneficial enjoyment of it.”

So far as I am aware, the question under consideration is untouched by a single common law adjudication of this state, and the complainant might, therefore, very properly, be turned away simply because both his right, and the law on which he rests it, are as yet unestablished and unrecognized in such manner as to entitle him to the aid of a court of equity. But the question is not a new one in this court. It has twice been the subject of judicial consideration. Eirst, in 1838, by Chancellor Pennington, who, in Robeson v. Pittenger, 1 Gr. Ch. 64, said that, as a general rule, in a ease of ancient lights, where they have existed for upwards of twenty years, undisturbed, the owner of the adjoining lot has no right to obstruct them; particularly so if the ■person who' built the house also owned the adjoining lot, and then subsequently sold the house, but kept the lot. He, however, admitted that the enforcement of this doctrine in populous cities, where laud is very valuable, and where it is the constant practice to place buildings side by side, [220]*220would be productive of great injustice. It is proper, also, to remark, that it is quite obvious, even upon a cursory perusal of the opinion, that the conclusion reached in that case rested mainly on the idea that an easement there had been created by an implied covenant not to obstruct, rather than by adverse user. .

The second case, King v. Miller, 4 Hal. Ch. 559, was decided by Chancellor Ilalsted, in 1851. Yo allusion is made to the previous ease, or to any other adjudication or dictum, nor is there anything in his opinion which will justify the belief that the subject was at all considered in the light of either antecedent or cotemporaneous investigations, and yet the opinion presents a very accurate epitome of all the decisive considerations which have induced the tribunals of this country very generally to repudiate the doctrine. He thus combats it: “ Where one has a right to put up a

building on the spot where he erects it, and to continue it there, and the adjoining owner can do nothing to prevent its erection there, and can do nothing to prevent its remaining there, it is absurd to say that the latter can, by lapse of time, lose his right to build up to his line. A person, by making an erection on his own property, which he has a right to make and continue there, and which the adjoining owner has no means of preventing, can thereby acquire no right injurious to his neighbor.” The same view, in a much more amplified form, will be found expressed in Parker v. Foote, 19 Wend. 309 ; Meyers v. Gemmel, 10 Barb. 537; Carrig v. Dee, 14 Gray 583; Ingraham v. Hutchinson, 2 Conn. 584; Cherry v. Stein, 11 Md. 1; Napier v. Bulwinkle, 5 Rich. 311; Haverstick v. Sipe, 33 Pa. St. 371; Ray v. Sweeney, 6 Reporter 74; Sterin v. Hanch, 17 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.) 435 and note; Hilatt v. Morris, 10 Ohio St. 580; Mullen v. Stricher, 19 Ohio St. 135; Morrison v. Marquardt, 24 Iowa 35. And the following text writers state that the doctrine has received but a limited recognition in this country, and that even the states which, in early times, gave it the most cordial recognition, have [221]*221now either discarded it entirely or greatly modified it. Wood on Nuisances 152 § 153; Washburn on Eas. 497 § 17; 3 Kent’s Com. 448.

The argument in exposition of the infirmities of the doctrine, is, I think, presented more forcibly by Justice Bronson, in Parker v. Foote, than in any opinion or disquisition that has come under my notice. Stated in substance, his argument is this: A grant may be rationally presumed where the user, if not rightful, has been an immediate and continuing injury to the person against whom the presumption is made. His property has either been invaded, or his beneficial interest in it has been rendered less valuable. If one commits a daily trespass on the land of another, under a claim of right to pass over, or feed cattle upon it, or divert the water from his mill, or throw it back upon his land or machinery, the injury is of such a character that he may have immediate redress by action; and if he stands by, aequiescingly and unresistingly, his conduct affords strong presumptive evidence that the acts done against his property were done of right. But, in the case of windows overlooking the land of another, the injury, if any, is merely ideal and imaginary. The light and air which they admit are not the subjects of grant, nor of property beyond the moment of actual occupancy. In such a case there is no adverse user, nor, indeed, any use whatever of another’s property. Ho foundation is, therefore, laid for indulging in any presumption against the rightful owner.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.J. Eq. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-dutcher-njch-1879.