Kratz v. Risch

13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 478, 30 Ohio Dec. 589, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 121
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 25, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 478 (Kratz v. Risch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kratz v. Risch, 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 478, 30 Ohio Dec. 589, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 121 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Stroup, J.

The only question for determination as made in the briefs of counsel, and the only one I am called upon to decide, pertains to the proper construction to be placed upon a certain clause in a warranty deed executed by Edward B. Angel to Thomas Uppington, under date of May 19, 1866, which deed conveys certain premises located on Howard street, in the city of Akron, Ohio.

[479]*479Does the following language employed in the deed create a covenant running with the land, or a condition?

“Subject to the condition that the owner of the part of said lot herein described shall build, construct, maintain and keep in repair a passage, stairway and landing not less than three feet in width along and adjoining the party wall between the south part of said lot and the part heroin described from the east line of Howard street to the second-story of such building as may be upon the part of said lot herein described and that said passage and stairway shall at all times be and continue an open, free and unobstructed passage for all persons and for all purposes for which such ways are ordinarily used.”

The plaintiffs contend- that a condition subsequent was created by the above language, that the language used does not evince an intention of -a covenant running with the land, and that in law the subject-matter is not of such a character that it can be deemed to be a covenant running with the land, and since the parties hereto were not the original parties to the deed, nor heirs of the same, that for that reason the plaintiffs are not in law bound to construct, maintain or keep in repair the stairway mentioned in the above quoted clause, that the defendants have no right to use the same as an approach to the upper stories of their building, and that an injunction should be granted enjoining the use of the stairway on the part of the defendants.

The defendants contend that a covenant running with the land was created by the language employed and that the plaintiffs are therefore under obligation to maintain the stairway in question, and that the defendants have the right to use the same as a means of access to their building, and they pray for a dismissal of the petition.

So it will be seen that if a covenant running with the land was created, the plaintiff’s case must fail, but if a condition subsequent was created the prayer of the petition must be granted.

At the hearing of the case there was introduced evidence showing the location of the premises at the time the deed was made, as bearing upon the proper construction to be placed on the language used, and the court allowed such testimony to be [480]*480given, taking the question as to the admissibility of tbe evidence under advisement, to be passed upon when the case was finally disposed of. It being plain to the mind of the court from a reading of the deed that it is necessary to look to the circumstances surrounding the parties and the premises to properly construe the language employed, I hold that such testimony was competent and overrule the objection made thereto, and a proper exception is noted.

In support of this ruling I cite but one of the many authorities on this subject, namely, 11 Cyc., page 1058:

“In determining the subject-matter of a covenant, it is the duty of the court to ascertain the intention of the parties, and if that be lawful to give effect to it, and when the language employed is so ambiguous and contradictory as to leave it doubtful what the parties did intend, it must call to its aid the surrounding circumstances, the object had in view by the parties, and their state and condition.”

Aided by the evidence showing the surrounding circumstances, what is the proper construction to be placed upon the deed as to the intent or otherwise of creating a covenant running with the land conveyed? The evidence shows that the original grantor, Edward B. Angel, owned two parcels of land on Howard street. The south parcel at the time the deed was made was nearly, if not completely, occupied by a block, and as the building was constructed the only means of getting to the second floor was by the use of an outside stairway, which was located on the north parcel. Angel in the deed mentioned conveyed the north parcel, which at that time had no building standing upon it, and therefore it became necessary to place in the deed the clause in question.

What did the parties intend by this clause? Was it to be merely a personal covenant or was it to be a permanent agreement ?

The clause in question states “the owner of the part of said lot herein described (the north parcel) shall build, construct and maintain and keep in repair a passage, stairway and landing.”

[481]*481It will be noted that tbe obligation, by tbe language used, is confined to tbe owner, and does not in words -include Ms assigns. Tbe clause does state that a ‘ ‘ passage, stairway and landing not less than three feet in width along and adjoining the party wall between the south part of said lot and the part •herein described from the east line of Howard street to the second-story of such building as may be upon the part of said lot herein described, and that such passage and stairway shall at all times be and continue an open, free and unobstructed passage for all persons and for all purposes for which such ways are ordinarily used. ’ ’ Evidently the original grantee, from the -reading of-this clause, was contemplating the erection of’a building on the parcel to which he gained title under said deed; at least, he accepted the deed with the clause therein written; It is evident the grantor did not intend that upon Ms death, or the death of his heirs, or upon the death of the grantee a reconstruction of his building might be required so as to provide a new means of access to the second-story, and it is clear that the original grantee, looking toward the erection of a building on the north parcel, did not have in contemplation that- the original grantor should make such change in his building, for if such intention was present it is not shown by the language used. When people build blocks they construct them with a view to permanency, and do not contemplate any change in the same, especially as to their means of ingress and egress to and’-from the upper stories.

It is contended by the plaintiffs with much force that the word “assigns” or other words meaning subsequent owner was omitted purposely, and that therefore the clause can not be construed as a covenant running with the land, and, furthermore, that since in its language it speaks of a “condition,” that has a strong tendency to show that the parties intended a condition and not a covenant. But a review of the authorities on this subject shows clearly that the court must look first to the intention of the parties, and if the proper words were not written to express that intention, to read them into the instrument.

“It is true that the word ‘proviso’ is a proper one to constitute a common law condition in a deed or will, but this is not [482]*482the fixed and invariable meaning attached to it by the law in these instruments. On the contrary, it gives way to the intention of the parties as gathered from an examination of the whole instrument and has frequently been thus explained and applied as expressing simply a covenant or limitation in trust.” (5 Wallace, 119, at page 166.)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 478, 30 Ohio Dec. 589, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kratz-v-risch-ohctcomplsummit-1912.