Pearson v. Matheson

86 S.E. 1063, 102 S.C. 377, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 21, 1915
Docket9139
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 86 S.E. 1063 (Pearson v. Matheson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearson v. Matheson, 86 S.E. 1063, 102 S.C. 377, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 231 (S.C. 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

*380 The appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court which dismissed the complaint.

The controversy arises out of a deed from Matheson to Watson and two written contracts betwixt the same parties.

The subject matter of the action is a skylight in the roof of a store building, and a right of way to and from the rear of the store building.

The occasion of the controversy arises out of the destruction by fire of the building about which the paper writings were had, and the erection of another building on the same site and foundations.

The contention of the plaintiff is, that the occasion of the new building, in the place of that which was burned, has modified those rights which the plaintiff theretofore had in a certain skylight in the former building.

The controversy is not between the two original parties to the contracts; but between one of them and the assignee of the other.

A history of the controversy is this:

Matheson was the owner of a considerable block of land on the corner of Darlington and Marlboro streets, in heart of Bennettsville. At the beginning of 1905 this property was undeveloped; on 2d February, 1905, Matheson conveyed by deed the corner lot, but one to Dane Watson, and on the same day these two made a contract in writing about a building on the lots, which they “considered a part of- the * * * deed from Matheson to Watson;” buildings were erected on the lot by the parties, by Watson a one-story storeroom and by Matheson, amongst other structures, a hotel above thé several storerooms, that is, on the second floor; some controversy arose between Matheson and Watson about getting steam and water pipes in the hotel above, and on 31st July, 1905, they made another written contract, and therein Watson gave to Matheson the right to run water and steam pipes through his store building into the hotel above it, and Matheson gave to Watson the right to open skylights *381 in the roof above the store of Watson; on 24th March, 1906, Watson conveyed his lot and store to Pearson, and therein provided: “That this conveyance is made subject to contracts entered into between Watson and Matheson, which are duly recorded as aforesaid, and which are made a part of this deed, and to which all needed reference is had.” . In January, 1908, the buildings were destroyed by fire; Matheson and Pearson commenced to rebuild, and in that performance this controversy arises; the buildings have been completed under an armistice betwixt them, but the questions made by this appeal were left open for adjudication.

There are five exceptions, but the appellant has argued but three questions, and those will be decided. They are these: (1) By the deed from Matheson to Watson the reservation conflicted with the grant, and is, therefore, of no force; (2) but if that be not so, yet under all the paper writings appellant has the right to insert skylights in the new structures; (3) the appellant is entitled to an alleyway leading by the rear of his store building, out to the highway called Marlboro street.

1 The deed from Matheson to Watson is too plain in its terms to call for any construction of it; the instrument means that which its words indicate. Thereby the grantor by proper words conveyed to the grantee in fee a parcel of land fronting on Darlington street twenty-three feet, running back one hundred and six feet, and with a width in the rear of twenty-three feet. The clause of the deed referred to by appellant as reservation limits the right of Watson and his heirs and assigns to build higher than fourteen feet up from the ground, and reserves the right so to build above that line in the grantor and his heirs and assigns.

The contract betwixt Matheson and Watson hereinbefore referred to, and providing, amongst other things, for the construction of the buildings on the lot, was made by its *382 terms and the terms of the deed also, a part of the deed; and it binds the parties to it and their heirs and assigns.

The two together plainly evince the intent of the parties to confine Watson’s tenure to the soil of the lot granted and fourteen feet above it; and to reserve to Matheson the use of all that space which lay above the fourteen-foot line parallel to and above the soil.

The only issue, if there be any issue, is whether such a contract may be made ?

The ownership of Matheson, when he conveyed to Watson, was not limited by four parallel lines and the earth’s surface which lay betwixt them. He owned that which lay below the earth’s surface, and that which was above it; also he could not dig for a foundation, or build a house.

Therefore, “a man entitled to land * * * may grant the mines underneath * * * and other rights in or over the property.” 3 Washburn 340; Massot v. Moses, 3 S. C. 195.

And if Matheson had the right to divide his holdings by lateral lines, and did that in plain words, then there is no repugnance betwixt the parts of the deed, and the cases cited by counsel thereabout have no relevancy to the matter here in question.

The-first issue, therefore, must go against the appellant.

2-4 The next question is of more serious import, that which involves Pearson’s present right to skylights in his store. If such right now exists it arises solely out of the contract of 31st July, 1905. There was no such express or implied right reserved by the deed from Matheson to Watson and the contract concurrently therewith made by them.

The second story, or that aerial part of the lot lying above a line parallel to the earth and fourteen feet above the earth, was intended to be used for the construction of a hotel.

So far as the deed and concurrent contract show, a solid floor and rooms on it may have been constructed immedi *383 ately above Pearson’s store, and in that event a skylight would not have been possible of construction.

There is no direct testimony on the subject, but the inference from the testimony is, that in the construction of the hotel a light well, for the hotel rooms, was left open over Pearson’s store. The respondent’s argument concedes so much.

The inference, too, is, that the contract of 31st July, 1905, arose proximately out of a desire by Matheson to run the heating pipes, for the hotel, through the Watson-Pearson store. By that contract Watson gave to Matheson and his successors the right to construct and maintain the pipes; and Matheson gave to Watson and his assigns the right to let skylights into the roof over Watson’s store.

These two reciprocal rights, called privileges in the argument and assured by the agreement, make up the whole of it, except the last paragraph thereof, which (1) extends the privilege to the assigns of the parties; and (2) continues the privileges as long as either of the parties or their assigns may desire them.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.E. 1063, 102 S.C. 377, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-matheson-sc-1915.