J. C. Vereen & Sons, Inc. v. Houser

167 So. 45, 123 Fla. 641, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 1025
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 31, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 167 So. 45 (J. C. Vereen & Sons, Inc. v. Houser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. C. Vereen & Sons, Inc. v. Houser, 167 So. 45, 123 Fla. 641, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 1025 (Fla. 1936).

Opinion

Buford, J.

The appeal in this case brings for review a decree dismissing a bill of complaint, the purpose of which was to procure a mnadatory injunction requiring the defendant to remove the eaves of a house overhanging the complainant’s property.

The appellant in its brief alleges that there is one question to be determined as follows:

“Where the granting or denial of a mandatory injunction turns on whether or not the prescriptive period or the Statute of Limitations has run against the plaintiff, is it proper to deny the mandatory injunction, and to decree that the equities are with the defendant, and to dismiss plaintiff’s bill of complaint at the cost of the plaintiff, where defendants offered no evidence in support of their contention, and where it affirmatively appears from testimony in behalf of plaintiff that the easement contended for has not existed for the full prescriptive period as laid down by the common law, and that there has been no hostile or adverse user of the easement claimed by defendants for a continuous period of longer than three years at the most?”

*644 It appears to us that this is the only question presented on the record before us and it must be answered in the negative.

While the record shows that the eave of the house complained of has extended over complainant’s property for a number of years, there is no proof that the possession of complainant’s property by reason of the overhanging of the eaves of the house belonging to the defendant and his predecessor in title ever became such a possession on the part of the defendant or his' predecessors in title as to require title to the easement by prescription.

In Burdine v. Sewell, 92 Fla. 375, 109 Sou. 648, we held :

“An easement has been defined to be ‘a privilege without profit, which the owner of one tenement has the right to enjoy in respect to that tenement in or over the tenement of another person, whereof the latter is obliged to suffer or refrain from doing something on his own tenement for the advantage of the former.’ Jones on Easements, Sec. 1.
2. The essential elements or qualities' of easements are: ‘first, they are incorporeal; second, they are imposed upon corporeal property; third, they confer no right to a participation in the profits arising from such property; fourth, they are imposed for the benefit of corporeal property; fifth, there must be two distinct tenements — the dominant, to which the right belongs, and the servient, upon which the obligation rests.’ Jones' on Easements, Sec. 1.”

In that case we also held:

“An easement being an interest in land, can be created only by grant, the existence of which may be established by the production of a deed expressly declaring it, or may be inferred by construction, from the terms and effect of an existing deed, or evidence of the grant may be derived from its having been so long enjoyed as to be regarded as' proof *645 that a grant was originally made, though no deed is produced which contains it. In other words, there are three ways in which an easement may be created — first, by express grant; second, by implication; third, by prescription.”

So we may now say that an easement in the right to maintain by one party the eave of his house overhanging the property of another party may be acquired by prescription, but for it to be acquired by prescription the use must be of that duration and of that quality which is required for one to acquire title to the real property of another by prescription.

A right of this sort is an incorporeal property as distinguished from a corporeal property. See Thompson on Real Estate, Vol. 1, page 481; Boyce v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 168 Mo. 583, 68 S. W. 920; 58 L. R. A. 442; Missouri v. Illinois, 200 U. S. 496, 50 Law Ed. 572.

In Thompson on Real Property, Vol. 1, page 487, the law applicable to the creation of estates by prescription is stated in part as follows:

“An easement by prescription is created only by adverse use of the privilege with the knowledge of the person against whom it is claimed, or by a use so open, notorious, visible and uninterrupted that knowledge will be presumed, and exercised under a claim of right adverse to the owner and acquiesced in by him; and such adverse user must have existed for a period equal at least to that prescribed by the statute of limitations for acquiring title to land by adverse possession.”

In the case of Jessee French Piano & Organ Co. v. Forbes, 129 Ala. 471, 29 Sou. 683, the Court said:

“If the user be not exclusive, and not inconsistent with the rights of the owner of the land to its use and enjoyment, the presumption is that such user is permissive, rather than *646 adverse. An easement by prescription is created only by an adverse use of the privilege with the knowledge of the person against whom it is claimed, or by use so open, notorious, visible and uninterrupted that knowledge will be presumed, and exercised under a claim of right adverse to the owner, and acquiesced in by him; and such adverse use must exist for a period equal, at least, to that prescribed by the statute of limitations for acquiring title to land by adverse possession. Jones, Easem. No. 164. No easement can be acquired when the use is by express or implied permission. Id. Nos. 179, 180. The user of enjoyment of the right claimed in order to become an easement by prescription, must have been adverse to the owner of the estate over which the easement is claimed, under a claim of right, exclusive, continuous and uninterrupted, and with the knowledge and acquiescence of the same. Steele v. Sullivan, 70 Ala. 589; 2 Wait. Act & Def. 693. One circumstance always considered is whether the user is against the interest of the party suffering it, or injurious to him. There must be an invasion of the party’s right, for, unless one loses something, the other gains nothing. 2 Wait. Act. & Def. 694; Rountree v. Brantley, 34 Ala. 544, 552; Arnold v. Stevens, 24 Pick 106. The presumption of a grant can never arise where all the circumstances are perfectly consistent with the non-existence of a grant. Arnold v. Stevens, supra; Ricard v. Williams, 7 Wheat. 109, 5 L. Ed. 399.”

We think this statement by the Supreme Court of Alabama is a clear enunciation of the governing principles applying to this case.

The record in this case falls short of meeting the rule laid down in that decision that the record fails to show that the defendant, or his predecessor in title, for any period of *647 time longer than three years at the outside exercised the use of complainants property as complained of under any claim of right adverse to the owner or that any claim of right by the defendant adverse to the owner was ever at any time acquiesced in by the owner.

In the case of Zetrouer v. Zetrouer, 89 Fla. 253, 103 Sou. 625, Mr. Justice Terrell, speaking for the Court, said:

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Bluebook (online)
167 So. 45, 123 Fla. 641, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-c-vereen-sons-inc-v-houser-fla-1936.