Kennedy v. Burnap

52 P. 843, 120 Cal. 488, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 795
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1898
DocketL. A. No. 322
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 52 P. 843 (Kennedy v. Burnap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Burnap, 52 P. 843, 120 Cal. 488, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 795 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Action for an injunction. The defendant Burnap had judgment, from which plaintiff appeals on the judgment-roll, including bill of exceptions presenting motion to strike out certain allegations in the amended complaint, and the ruling of the court thereon.

But two questions are involved: "1. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer made on the ground of misjoinder of parties defendant: and 2. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer as to that portion of the amended complaint relating to light and air; and for like reasons the court erred in striking from the amended complaint all matters relating to light and air.”

The motion to strike out having been granted, the result was to leave the complaint shorn of facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

It appeared from the complaint that in 1887 one Hanbury owned certain lots and parts of lots, in the city of San Diego, fronting one hundred and forty-five feet on Third street and one hundred feet on D street. He built a lodging house on the north fifty feet of the tract in 1881, fronting on Third street and running back ninety feet. The lower story was finished for stores, and above this story and in each of the three upper stories windows opened out upon the vacant lots, admitting light and air to the south part of the building, which were alleged to be necessary for the use of and to render habitable this part of the house; Hanbury used the house in this condition until May 2, 1890, when he sold it and the land on which it rested to plaintiff’s testator; Hanbury retained ownership of the remaining lots until September 13, 1892, when he sold them to the Savings Bank of San Diego County, and on January 20, 1896, the bank sold the lots to defendant Burnap; on May 9, 1896, Burnap began the erection of a three-story building on his lots and close to and against plaintiff’s building, so as to entirely close up and darken the said windows in her building and shut off all light and air; these windows had been used as formerly and up to [490]*490the time of defendant’s purchase. It was alleged that the proposed building would destroy one-third the value of plaintiff’s-property and render the south part of the house uninhabitable and unfit for use and cause irreparable damage.

1. The principal contention of appellant is, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer and granting the motion because from the facts pleaded it clearly appeared that there were appurtenant to the premises, as a dominant estate, easements of light and air through the door and windows in the south wall, over the land adjoining it on the south, as the servient estate.

It is claimed that under the provisions of sections 662, 801, 1084, 1104, and 1107 of the Civil Code, and the decisions of this court, the complaint showed the existence of such easements of light and air with which defendants threatened to interfere. The conveyance from Hanbury to Kennedy was a grant deed.

Appellant disclaims any right by prescription or by user and so denies the authority of Western etc. Co. v. Knickerbocker, 103 Cal. 111, where it was said: “The doctrine that a proprietor of land may by user acquire an easement over adjoining land for the passage of light and air does not prevail in this country.” The claim broadly made is that the easement of light and air passes by implied grant under our statute. It would seem to us that the reasons for supporting a right by prescription are even stronger than can be advanced in support of an implied grant. The questions are closely allied, and are often found discussed together and as depending on like reasons. But three states of the American Union retain the common law upon this subject, to wit, Illinois, Kerv Jersey, and Louisiana. The first American case (Story v. Odin (1815), 12 Mass. 157, 7 Am. Dec. 46), which has been so often referred to as authority for the prescriptive right, was long ago overruled in that state. As recently as 1874, in Keats v. Hugo, 115 Mass. 204, 15 Am. Rep. 80, the eases were re-examined and the doctrine very ably considered by Gray, C. J., and he there shows that even in Story v. Odin, supra, the right by prescription was not necessarily involved. This case, in 115 Massachusetts, is valuable, however, for its discussion of the precise question now before us. It was there said: “The reasons,upon which it has been held that no grant of a right to air and light can be implied from any length of continuous enjoyment, are equally strong against implying a grant of such [491]*491a right from the mere conveyance of a house with windows overlooking thé land of the grantor. To imply the grant of such a right in either case, without express words, would greatly embarrass the improvement of estates, and, by reason of the very indefinite character of the right asserted, promote litigation. The simplest rule and that best suited to a country like ours, in which changes are taking place in the ownership and the use of lands, is that no right of this character can be acquired without express grant of an interest in, or covenant relating to, the lands over which the right is claimed.”

The leading case in Hew York state is Parker v. Foote, 19 Wend. 309. Bronson, J., in the opinion of the court, said: “There is, I think, no principle upon which the modern English doctrine on the subject of lights can be supported. It is an anomaly in the law. It may do well enough in England. But it cannot be applied in the growing cities and villages of this country without working the most mischievous consequences.”

In Morrison v. Marquardt, 24 Iowa, 35, 92 Am. Dec. 444, Dillon, J., presents the subject in a still different light, reaching the same result. He said: “Surely an easement uncertain in its extent and duration, without any written record evidence of its existence, fettering estates, and laying an embargo upon the hand of improvement which carries the trowel and the plane, and, as applied to a subsequent purchaser, against the spirit of our recording acts, and not demanded by any consideration of public policy—surely such an easement should not be held to exist by mere implication.” The question will be found more or less fully treated in Keiper v. Klein, 51 Ind. 316. (Also in Mullen v. Stricker, 19 Ohio St. 138; 2 Am. Rep. 379; Rennyson’s Appeal, 94 Pa. St. 147; 39 Am. Rep. 777.)

We have no hesitation in adopting the prevailing rule in this country, and are content with the reasons upon which it rests. Hor do we think there is anything in our statutes restraining us from so holding.

Appellant insists that our code provisions as to easements are “substantially the same as the common law,” and therefore “must be construed as continuations thereof.” (Civ. Code, sec. 5.) Counsel presents with much force and ability the proposition that section 1104 of the Civil Code has converted what, at common law were implied easements of light and air by severance of es[492]*492tate, into statutory easements by such, severance; and he urges that the rejection of this easement created by prescription does not necessarily justify the judicial repeal of the statutory easement created by severance.

• The provisions of section 1104, so much relied upon by appellant as creating by severance the very easement in question, we do not think have the effect claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
52 P. 843, 120 Cal. 488, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-burnap-cal-1898.