Lambert v. Huntsman

209 S.W.2d 709, 306 Ky. 862, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 669
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 16, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 209 S.W.2d 709 (Lambert v. Huntsman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lambert v. Huntsman, 209 S.W.2d 709, 306 Ky. 862, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 669 (Ky. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Knight —

Affirming.

Tbis is a suit by appellants to enjoin appellee from interfering with tbe use of a private passway over land belonging to tbe appellee and to bave appellants adjudged to bave an easement over and along said pass-way. From an order denying tbe injunction and dismissing tbe petition, appellants prosecute tbis appeal.

Filed as an exhibit with appellee’s testimony is a diagram or plat showing tbe location of tbe private passway involved and its relation to appellants’ property and tbe surrounding buildings, open spaces and alleys. "With tbis plat to use in connection with tbe testimony of tbe parties, tbe situation involved in tbe case becomes clear and easily understood. Without it, it is almost impossible to convey any idea to a reader of tbis opinion of tbe situation as it exists and, therefore, no extensive description of the layout will be attempted. It is sufficient to say that appellants own a lot 22 feet wide by 103 feet deep facing on tbe public square in tbe town of Scottsville. On tbe front 2/3 of tbis lot is a building in which appellants operate a combined pool and lunch room for which they receive large quantities of soft drinks and other supplies, which they customarily receive in tbe rear of tbe building, and part of which *864 is stored in the basement. The rear 1/3 of this lot is vacant property, not occupied by any building. Appellants acquired title to this property September 1, 1941, from G. W. Weaver who had acquired title from H. E. Dixon on May 29, 1929, Dixon having acquired title on August 7, 1919. Immediately north of appellants’ lot is an open, vacant lot extending from appellants’ property to a public alley some 80 or 90 feet north of appellants’ lot. This vacant lot, which appears from the unsealed plat to be approximately 25 feet wide, is owned by N. S. Guy, who also owns a residence and a store building which abut it on the east and west respectively to the extent of its northern 78 feet. The other 22 feet of this vacant lot is abutted on the east by a building occupied by a pressing shop, immediately north of appellants’ property, and is abutted on the west by a vacant lot, including the passway involved here, on the northern edge thereof, belonging to appellee. It is, therefore, very clear from the plat and proof, if it is not from this description, that the passway in question has no direct connection with appellants’ lot and does not touch it anywhere. It begins at Cemetery Street and ends in Guy’s vacant lot, above referred to, about 22 feet north of appellants’ property. To go to and from said passway from the rear of appellants’ lot, it is necessary to travel over the southern 22 feet of N. S. Guy’s vacant lot.

The passway in question covers the northern 12 to 15 feet (width not definitely shown) of a tract of 80 feet by 90 feet at the northeast corner of North Cemetery Street and West Main Street in Scottsville, title to which was acquired by appellee by deed from N. S. Guy, dated February 9, 1910. On the southern 46 feet of this lot is a warehouse belonging to appellee; the northern 44 feet is a vacant lot, the passway in question being the northern 12 to 15 feet of this vacant lot. Adjoining. this warehouse on the east is a store- building 103 feét by 46 feet at the northwest corner of West Main Street and the public square. This store building, the adjacent warehouse on the west and the vacant lot on the north of the warehouse were used by appellee for his hardware and implement business under the name of the Farmers’ Supply Company. The store building is now occupied by the National Farm Store, a corpora *865 tion of Nashville, Tenn. This company also has a lease on the warehouse and the vacant lot immediately north of it, which includes the passway, for a period of ten years with the right of renewal for another ten years. Under the lease, the lessee has the right to tear down the old warehouse and erect a new one for use in its business. The new warehouse is to cover the entire lot, including the passway, if lessee so desires, and is to cost approximately $15,000.00. At the expiration of the lease, the building is to belong to the lessor. It was the proposed building of this warehouse by the lessee of appellee, with its probable covering and enclosing of the passway in question, that caused appellants to bring this suit to enjoin appellee against the proposed closing.

The Proof

It would unduly lengthen this opinion to analyze all the testimony in this case but we think it is fairly established that the passway in question was opened up by appellee for his own use in connection with his hardware and implement business and for use of his customers in getting into the vacant lot adjacent to his warehouse for the purpose of loading wire fencing, farm implements, etc.; that permissive use of the pass-way was granted on two separate occasions by appellant, once to H. E. Dixon, predecessor in title of appellant, who asked for and was given permission to use this passway to haul certain materials for the repair of his building on the lot now owned by appellant. In return for this use, he agreed to and did place some gravel on the passway to make it usable. This was some 20 years or more ago. The other instance was when permission was granted to WPA some 10 or 12 years ago to use this passway for hauling materials over it to its storage place on the vacant lots of appellee, N. S. Guy and others. The WPA improved the entrance of the passway from Cemetery Street and put gravel on it to make it passable, since which time it has not been improved. That the passway has been used by appellants without permission of appellee since they bought the business in 1939, and the building in 1941; that it was used occasionally by different persons, whose places of business faced on public square, for bringing in coal or other heavy materials; that some of these materials were brought in the alley, which runs to the north of this *866 property from North Court Street to Cemetery Street, and then brought down over the vacant lot of N. S. Guy, above referred to; that the driveway herein involved was used intermittently by various tenants who lived in the N. S. Guy residence immediately north of this passway; that all these usages, except H. E. Dixon and the WPA above referred to, were without permission and often without the knowledge of appellee and none of them were with any claim of right thereto by the various users nor were such claims brought home to appellee.

Law of the Case

The principles of law with reference to the acquisition of a prescriptive right of passway over the land of another by long continued usage are well settled in this state by the many decisions of this court involving such easements. The difficulty is in applying the law to the facts in the particular case. These principles were well set out in a leading case which came to this court from the same county, Allen, as does the case at bar and in which the attorneys were the same as in the present case. That case is Smith v. Oliver, 189 Ky. 214, 224 S. W. 683, 684, in which Judge Thomas, speaking’ for the court, said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 S.W.2d 709, 306 Ky. 862, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambert-v-huntsman-kyctapphigh-1948.