Kane v. Templin

138 N.W. 901, 158 Iowa 24
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 138 N.W. 901 (Kane v. Templin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kane v. Templin, 138 N.W. 901, 158 Iowa 24 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

McClain, C. J.

About the year 1.860, one J. D. Teuiplim was the owner of a parcel of'land in the business portion of Iowa City with a frontage of forty feet on the south side [26]*26of Washington street and extending southward one hundred and fifty feet to an alley, and erected thereon a two-story brick building of the entire width of the parcel of land and of a depth of about eighty feet. Through the center of this building, extending north and south, was a brick wall from the foundation to the roof, dividing the lower story into two storerooms, each about twenty feet in width, save that out of the east half space was taken for a front and a rear stairway, inclosed, and adjoining the center wiall, which stairways gave access to a hallway on the second floor extending the entire length of the building north and south and also adjoining the -center wall. There was no access to the front stairway from the west storeroom, but the back stairway was reached from that room through a door near the south end of the center wall. On the second floor, the rooms on the west side of the center wall were reached from the hallway through doors cut in the wall, and on the east side of the hallway were doors into corresponding rooms over the eastern storeroom. Without any substantial change of plan, the front and rear stairways and the hall on the second floor continued to be used for the purposes above indicated until the death of the owner in 1882, when the two portions of the premises passed by devise to different owners; the eastern part of the building being described as the west half of the east half of lot 2 in block 81, and the western part being described as the east half of the west half of the same lot. The title of the plaintiff and the defendants, respectively, to the west half and the east half of the building, rests upon these devises. For the purpose of determining the question presented, no further details as to the title to the respective portions of the property need be set out. The claim of plaintiff as owner of the west half of the building is that, under the devise to his remote grantors of the west half of the east half of lot 2, he acquired the right to the use of the stairways and hall as an easement appurtenant to his portion of the building; while the contention for defendants is that there was no easement [27]*27granted in the stairways and hall which are wholly within the limits of the east half of the building, and that the devise of that portion excluded any easement by implication or necessity. There is a further claim for defendants that, if any easement existed at the time the devise took effect, it has been abandoned by the conduct of plaintiff and those under whom he claims.

1. Real property: ease-implication. I. The devisees of the two halves of the building took title as purchasers, and their rights, so far as we can see, were the same as they would have been had J. D. Templin conveyed the west half of the building, that . is, the east half of the west half of lot 2, to plaintiff's remote grantors, and at the same time conveyed to others the east half of the building, that is, the west half of the east half of the same lot. If, at the time such conveyances were miade, there had existed, in the east half of the building adjoining the dividing wall, stairways and a hallway originally designed and still used, as was obvious to all the grantees, for the mutual convenience of the occupants of' the entire budding, then, as we think, the grantees of the west half would have acquired by implication an easement in ttíe use of such stairways and hall, and the grantees of the east half would have taken title subject to such easement. Thompson v. Miner, 30 Iowa, 386; Marshall Ice Co. v. La Plant, 136 Iowla., 621; Howell v. Estes, 71 Tex. 690 (12 S. W. 62); Doyle v. Lord, 64 N. Y. 432 (21 Am. Rep, 629).

2. Same It must be conceded that easements by implication are to be strictly limited to rights which in the very nature of the case must be presumed to have been in the minds of the parties concerned, appurtenant on the one hand and servient on the other; and the necessity of the use for the convenient enjoyment of the premises to which the easement is claimed as appurtenant is a material consideration in determining whether such easement is to be implied. Nevertheless, an easement by implication is a different thing from an easement by necessity, as the latter [28]*28term is properly used. Scott v. Palms, 48 Mich. 505 (12 N. W. 677). It must be conceded, also, that in some courts easements by implication have been limited to those existing strictly by necessity. See, for example, Buss v. Dyer, 125 Mass. 287; Hildreth v. Geogins, 91 Me. 227 (39 Atl. 550); Stillwell v. Foster, 80 Me. 333, (14 Atl. 731). Much may be said in behalf of this rule; but we think the other rule which recognizes an implied easement as arising out of the method of construction and use of the building, portions of which subsequently pass to different purchasers, has been adopted by this court in the cases already cited.

3. Same. Basements appurtenant pass with the description of the property to which they are appurtenant without specific designation, and, on the other hand, the purchaser of the servient property takes subject to the easement without express reservation. Teachout v. Capital Lodge, 128 Iowa, 380; Reed v. Gasser, 130 Iowa, 87; Hatton v. Cale, 152 Iowa, 485; Stephens v. Boyd (Iowa), 138 N. W. 389.

We do not undertake to say that, if the building should be entirely destroyed, the plaintiff would have an easement in that portion of defendants’ lot over which the stairways and hall are now maintained. No such question is before us. Plaintiff asks only that defendants be enjoined from obstructing his use of the stairways and hallway as they now exist, such use being that to which they were subject at the time title passed under separate ownership by virtue of the provisions of J. D. Templin’s will. We think this claim of plaintiff was properly recognized by the lower court.

4. Same : judge ments : codclusiveness. II. Appellants rely upon a decree in an action to which all the devisees of J. D. Templin were parties as an .adjudication in favor of defendants J. W. Templin and others against plaintiff’s remote grantor cutting off any • right in the east half of the building. But it appears that the action in wliieh such decree was rendered was one in which John W. Templin and his [29]*29minor children, who are defendants in the present action, asked that as against the other heirs or devisees of J. D. Templin the will of the" latter be so reformed as to correctly describe a certain parcel of land devised to said John W. Templin and his issue as the west half of the. east half of lot 2 in block 81, instead of the east half of the west half of said lot, which was in said will devised to a daughter, remote grantor of the plaintiff, and that the right of said plaintiffs to the west half of the east half of said lot under the will las thus corrected be confirmed, and that to remove any cloud from said plaintiff’s title the record of the will be made to conform to the correction asked.

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Bluebook (online)
138 N.W. 901, 158 Iowa 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kane-v-templin-iowa-1912.