Russell v. Heublein

34 A. 486, 66 Conn. 486, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 19, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 A. 486 (Russell v. Heublein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Heublein, 34 A. 486, 66 Conn. 486, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 82 (Colo. 1895).

Opinion

Torrance, J.

The plaintiff sought to have the defendant enjoined from obstructing a right of way which the plaintiff claims over the defendant’s land. Whether the plaintiff had any such right, depended upon the construction put upon a clause in a certain deed. The court below found certain facts, and upon those facts decided that, under the clause in question, the plaintiff had no such right as he claimed; and thereupon rendered judgment against him, and from that judgment the present appeal was taken.

The following is the substance of the finding:—

The plaintiff and defendant are adjoining owners of land on the west side of Main street in the city of Hartford. The plaintiff owns, what may for brevity be called, the north premises, and the defendant the south premises; and they each derive title from Walter and Henry Keney, who at one time owned both premises as an entirety. The south premises were conveyed by the Keneys to John P. Hoff or t in October, 1887, and by John P. Hoffort they were conveyed to the defendant in April, 1891. The north premises were conveyed by the Keneys direct to the plaintiff in June, 1889.

The south premises were formerly owned by Charles Brainard, James Ward, and Roswell Bartholomew,'as partners in business, and on the dissolution of the partnership by the death of Bartholomew, were divided into two equal parts, one of which was set out in severalty to the heirs of Bartholomew, and the other to Charles Brainard.

The deed of distribution contained the following: “ And the said representatives of the said Bartholomew and the said Brainard, and their respective heirs and assigns, have the right and privilege of a mutual gang or passway to and from the parts of said lot so to them respectively set, said gang or passway being described as follows, viz: Beginning at the southeast corner of the store upon said lot and running thence westerly to the southwest corner of said store, thence westerly to a mere stone by Nathaniel Patten’s land, thence southerly in a line of said Patten’s land 11 feet to a mere stone [488]*488standing upon a lot of land hereinbefore described, owned by the said Ward and Bartholomew, called the Doolittle place, and thence easterly in a line before described of said gangway about 197 feet to Main street, thence northerly by Main street to the place of beginning, said gang or passway being 11 feet in width.”

It is found that eight feet and three inches of the fee of the land covered by this gangway, on the south side thereof, subject to said gangway, was conveyed to and belonged with the Doolittle place lying south of the gangway, and that the fee of the other two feet and nine inches of land covered by the gangway, on the north side, subject to the gangway, was conveyed to and belonged with the south premises now owned by the defendant. Said eleven foot gangway was created as appurtenant to, and for the use of, the south premises now owned by the defendant, and for no other property. “ So far as the ownership of the 8 feet and 3 inches of the fee of the 11-foot gangway on the south side is concerned, it does not appear that either Charles H. Brainard or H. and W. Keney, or any other person, had a right to burden it with any additional servitude than that above mentioned.”

Upon the death of Charles Brainard, his son, Charles H. Brainard, became the owner of that part of the south premises which had been so set out to his father; and in 1856 he became, by conveyance from the Bartholomew heirs, the owner of the other part of the south premises. Charles H. Brainard continued to own the entire south premises down to 1876, when, by conveyance from one Deming, he became also the owner of the north premises now owned by the plaintiff, and thus become the owner of both the north and south premises as an entirety. He continued to thus own them as an entirety until September, 1886, when he conveyed them on the same day, but by separate deeds, to Walter and Henry Keney.

After Charles H. Brainard became the owner of the south premises, now owned by the defendant, “he built a large store-house on the rear of the lot, and in 1871 connected that store-house with the main building in front by a solid brick [489]*489wall ten feet high and one foot thick, without any opening or door-way through it; this brick wall ran along the north line of the premises from the east side of the store-house to the west side of the building in front; and upon the north half of the premises he erected sheds about 25 feet long from east to west, the north side of which was formed by the brick wall before mentioned.” He also, in 1880, when he was the owner of both the north and south premises, cut an ordinary doorway about three and a half feet wide through said brick wall, which is still in existence, but is outside of the claimed right of way. At this time L. T. Fenn was tenant of the north premises, now owned by the plaintiff, “and also a tenant of a part of what is now the defendant’s property, to wit, the sheds hereinbefore mentioned.”

At the time the Keneys conveyed the south premises to Hoffort, in 1887, they had leased the north premises, and the above mentioned sheds on the south premises, to L. T. Fenn for a term of five years from the 1st of May, 1887, and he was in possession of the leased premises under said lease. The only access to the sheds was by means of the eleven foot gangway aforesaid, and thence across the south premises to the sheds.

The defendant has maintained said brick wall and sheds to the present time, as they existed when the south premises were conveyed to him in 1891. The right of way here claimed, if it exists, will greatly damage the defendant’s property, and seriously interfere with its use.

The north premises, owned by the plaintiff, are entirely covered by the store and other buildings on them, except a small yard in the rear; this yard is surrounded on three sides and a part of the fourth, by the buildings, and on the remainder of the fourth side by the defendant’s brick wall; the access to this yard is through his own buildings from Main or Mulberry streets, and there is no necessity or occasion for the right of way which he now claims over the south premises. The Fenn lease expired on the 1st of May, 1892.

These are, in substance, the facts and circumstances under ■which the deed, containing the clause upon the construction [490]*490of which this case turns, was given; and that deed is the one from the Keneys to Hoffort, made October 10th, 188T. At that time the Keneys owned the north premises, now the plaintiff’s land, and when they conveyed the south premises to Hoffort they reserved, over them, a passway from the north premises to the eleven foot passway. When later on,, in 1889, they conveyed the north premises to the plaintiff, they also conveyed to him such rights of way over the Hoffort premises as are described in their deed to the plaintiff;. and when Hoffort conveyed the south premises to the defendant in 1891, he did so, subject to the rights of way which the Keneys had reserved in their deed to him. The deed from the Keneys to Hoffort, after conveying to him the right the Keneys had in the eleven foot gang or passway aforesaid, contained the following: “Also reserving a pass way for ourselves across said lot herein conveyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 A. 486, 66 Conn. 486, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-heublein-conn-1895.