Knotts v. Summit Park Co.

126 A. 280, 146 Md. 234, 1924 Md. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 126 A. 280 (Knotts v. Summit Park Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knotts v. Summit Park Co., 126 A. 280, 146 Md. 234, 1924 Md. LEXIS 133 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Ad-kies, J.,

delivered the opinion of the- Court.

The appellant and appellee in this case are owners of adjoining parcels of land in Baltimore County, both of which were formerly owned by Celestia A. Ferguson and used by her as one tract. It contained about 6% acres-, with a frontage of 4 9/10 perches o-n the Frederick Turnpike Road and *236 a greater width at the rear. By deed dated October 11th, 1871, she conveyed to Catherine Luckett that part of her lot fronting on the turnpike and running back about 792 feet, containing about 1% acres. The deed contained the following reservation:

“Subject, however, to a right of carriage and footway through the above described property on the east side thereof from the Frederick Turnpike southerly to the remaining portion of the property now held by said Celestia A. Ferguson.”

This lot is now owned by the appellant. On May 4th, 1872, Celestia A. Ferguson conveyed the remainder of the entire tract to Daniel Ooakley, the deed containing the following provision:

“It is further understood and by these presents intended to be conveyed to said Ooakley a right of way thirty feet wide (30) leading from the Frederick Turnpike Road as an entrance to the land bought by and hereby intended to be conveyed to him.”

The latter parcel was, on July 29th, 1886, conveyed by Brown and wife, the then owners, to James A. Gary and added to a tract of about sixty acres already owned by him and occupied as a country residence.

On October 10th, 1919, James A. Gary conveyed this estate of sixty-five acres to Martin Healy and others, who on the same day conveyed it to>. appellee.

The bill of complaint, filed on July 2nd, 1923, by appellee against the .appellant, sets up a right to the use of the carriage and foot way reserved in the deed from Celestia A. Ferguson to Catherine Luckett, which on the plat filed with the bill is designated as “thirty-foot right of way.” It alleges that this right was never questioned by any one until some time in the early part of December, 1922, when the plaintiff received notice from defendant’s attorney that she questioned plaintiff’s right to the use of said road or right of way, and the plaintiff was advised to discontinue the use of same, but plaintiff avers that for two and a half years after acquiring *237 title to said property it openly used said right of way as a matter of right, and their predecessors in title for fifty years or more hare claimed the rig|ht to and have used same with* ant question; that defendant has placed obstructions over said right of way for the purpose of preventing plaintiff from using same; and has thereby greatly interfered with the plaintiff in the enjoyment, operation and plan of development of its land and has and will continue to cause it great loss, injury and damage for which adequate compensation cannot be obtained in an action at law; and that unless such interference and obstruction is restrained by a, court of equity they will be ruinous and irreparable and will seriously impair the enjoyment and use of plaintiff’s property, and greatly depreciate the value thereof.

The prayer of the bill is: (1) 'That defendant may be required to remove obstruction® and restrained from interfering in any manner with the use of said road-way by plaintiff. (2) Tor other and further relief.

It thus appears that the plaintiff’s claim for relief is as to a right of way thirty feet wide, .and for the benefit of its entire development.

The grounds of defense, as. claimed, are: (1) The reservation in the deed from Ferguson to Duckett is only a designation by the parties to the deed of the location of a way of necessity. (2) It was personal to the grantor and as such terminated with the alienation of the dominant tenement, or with the death of grantor. (3) Abandonment by Gary, a former owner of the dominant tenement. (4) Changes in the dominant tenement involving an increased use of the easement not contemplated in its creation.

The trial court, in an able opinion, held that the right of way created by the reservation in the deed from Ferguson to Duckett is a subsisting easement appurtenant to the land conveyed by Brown and wife to Gary; but that the rights of the respective parties are fixed by the terms of the deed creating the right of way and not affected by a. later deed of the owner of the dominant estate giving a different description, and consequently the description of the right of *238 way in the deed -from Ferguson to Co-akley as being thirty feet in width is nugatory; that its width depends upon what the parties had in mind when the deed was executed and delivered-; that the way must be a reasonable one and of •sufficient width to be conveniently used, but that there is no evidence in the case from which the court could determine what its width should be; that plaintiffs claim is much too broad; that the way is for the use of the land reserved by the grantor,- and every person owning a portion of it is entitled to the use of the way for the benefit of his land, but-hot , for- the benefit of any other land that he may own, whether contiguous or not, and that one attempting to- use this right of way for any purpose whatever except for the benefit of the land conveyed by Brown and wife to Gary is a trespasser; that the claim of the plaintiff to the use of this right of way as a- road in the development of the Gary tract cannot be sustained.

The decree is: that plaintiff, its successors and assigns, are entitled to the right of a carriage and footway of sufficient Width to be conveniently used, through the property of defendant along the east side thereof from the Frederick Turnpike southerly to that part of plaintiff’s property formerly owned by Oelestia A. Ferguson, said right of way being for the use and benefit of said land now owned by the plaintiff and formerly owned by the said Oelestia A. Ferguson; that defendant is enjoined from obstructing or in any manner interfering, with the use and enjoyment of said right of why as aforesaid; that defendant is required and ordered to remove any and all obstructions from said right of way.

From that decree this appeal was taken.

We do not find .any support for defendant’s first proposition. The fact that there would have been a way of necessity in the absence of á grant, does not deprive a granted right of way of any of its incidents as a grant.

As to the second proposition: Words of limitation are not necessary to create .a perpetual easement by reservation where, in the absence of -any provision in the deed, an ease- *239 meat by necessity would have been implied. 9 B. C. L., page 753.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A. 280, 146 Md. 234, 1924 Md. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knotts-v-summit-park-co-md-1924.