Huntington v. . Asher

96 N.Y. 604, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 528
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 96 N.Y. 604 (Huntington v. . Asher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huntington v. . Asher, 96 N.Y. 604, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 528 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The contract of purchase and sale between the original parties contemplated the creation of a right to take ice from the unsold lands of the grantor as an incident to the conveyance of the half acre and an appurtenance of the land conveyed. It is impossible to study the arrangement in its details and arrive at a different conclusion. The half acre of land was purchased for the known and declared purpose of erecting thereon an ice-house to store the product of the pond, and as a *609 means of conducting the ice business. The terms of the deed substantially so declare, and the fact is not denied by the findings of the trial court. The right thus given was a natural, appropriate, and necessary adjunct of the land conveyed, having in view the purpose for which it was purchased, on the one hand, and sold, on the other. There was no sale of the right in gross for its own sole and separate consideration, but the price of the land paid and to be paid covered the land with its right attached. The arrangement was meant to be continuous, and to follow the two estates irrespective of their ownership. The conveyance of the right, like that of the land, was to the grantee and his assigns, and the former was declared in terms to pass as “ incident ” to the grant of the latter. And then the grantee, for himself, his heirs and assigns,” covenants to furnish ice to the successive grantees of the pond and mill privilege so long as they reside in the town of Ehinebeck. The contract thus contemplated a dominant and servient estate. If a mill, dependent upon water-power, had stood upon the half acre, the right to draw from the pond would have passed with the land as an appurtenant easement, if such had been the actual situation of the premises, or the express agreement of the parties. If no mill and no raceway were there, but the purchase was for the purpose of erecting them, and the deed gave the water-right accordingly and as incident to the conveyance, such right would become an appurtenance, at least when exercised, and pass with the land. But the right in question here is of a somewhat different character, and upon that difference is founded the conclusion of the General Term, and "much of the argument before us.

The opinion below asserts that the right under consideration was not an easement attached to a dominant estate, and not an appurtenance of the latter. The reason assigned is in these words : “ A right by which one person is entitled to remove and appropriate for his own use any thing growing in, or attached to, or subsisting upon the land of another for the purpose of the profit to be gained from the property thereby acquired in the thing removed, has always been considered in *610 law a different species of right from an easement. Such right is a privilege, and so is an easement; but the latter is a privilege without profit, and is merely accessorial to the rights of property in land, while the former is the reverse. If granted to one in gross it is so far of the character of an estate or interest in the land itself that it is treated as such.” Authority is then cited for the doctrine. (Per Chancellor Walworth, Post v. Pearsall, 22 Wend. 425 ; Godd. on Easements, 5 et seq.; 2 Washburn, 11 et seq., 312, 521, 528.) And the learned General Term add that “ an easement proper in gross cannot be created by grant "so as to be assignable or inheritable.” (Ackroyd v. Smith, 10 C. B. 164.)

It must be admitted that the strict and technical definition of an easement excludes a right to the products or proceeds of land, or, as they are generally termed, profits a prendre. But that such a right is in the nature of an easement, and although capable of being transferred in gross, may also be attached to land as an appurtenance and pass as such, is shown by the authorities to which the General Term refer. In Post v. Pearsall {supra) the language of the chancellor is, “for a profit a pendre in the land of another, when not granted in favor of some dominant tenement, cannot properly be said to be an easement, but an interest or estate in the land itself.” That it may be so granted by the terms of the grant as to become an appurtenant right in the nature of an easement is implied in the citation. Washburn, to whose discussion of the subject we are referred, says distinctly, “ this right of profit a prendre, if enjoyed by reason of holding a certain other estate, is regarded in the light of an easement appurtenant to such éstate (Wash, on Eas. 8, § 7); and alluding also to rights acquired by custom or dedication, the author adds : it would be difficult to treat of easements or servitudes, without embracing these rights, as well as that of taking profits in another’s land which one may enjoy in connection with the occupancy of the estate to which such right is united.” It seems, therefore, to be the law, that a right to take a profit from another’s land, although capable of being transferred in gross, may also be so attached *611 to a dominant estate as to pass with it by a grant transferring the land with its appurtenances.

The case of Ackroyd v. Smith (10 C. B. 164) does not controvert this doctrine, but rather limits and restricts it. There the controversy arose over a grant of way to the premises conveyed for all purposes,” and the question came up whether a conveyance of the alleged dominant estate carried this right to the purchaser, and it was ruled that it did not. The court said : If the right conferred by the deed set out was only to use the road in question for purposes connected with the occupation and enjoyment of the land conveyed, it does not justify the acts confessed by the plea. But if the grant was more ample, and extended to using the road for purposes unconnected with the enjoyment of the land,— and this, we think, is the true construction of it,— it becomes necessary to decide whether the assignee of the land and appurtenances would be entitled to it.” The court thereupon ruled that it is not in the power of a vendor to create any rights not connected with the use or enjoyment of the land, and annex them to it, and held that such right must inhere in the land; ” must concern the demised premises and the mode of occupying them ; ” “ must be quodammodo annexed and appurtenant to them ; ” “ must both concern the thing demised and tend to support it, and support the reversioner’s estate.” That the right claimed in the present case is within the boundary assigned seems to us quite certain. It respected the use and occupation of the half acre; was necessary and essential to that use; and directly concerned the mode of occupying the land as contemplated both by vendor and vendee. An instructive case on this point is that of Grubb v. Guilford (4 Watts, 223). There, on sale of twenty acres of ore-bank, a right was also given to the grantee to enter upon other lands of the grantor and search for iron ore, and mine and carry it away. The question was whether such right was appurtenant to the twenty acres,- and it was held that it was not.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.Y. 604, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huntington-v-asher-ny-1884.