Sabins v. McAllister

76 A.2d 106, 116 Vt. 302, 1950 Vt. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 3, 1950
Docket516
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 76 A.2d 106 (Sabins v. McAllister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabins v. McAllister, 76 A.2d 106, 116 Vt. 302, 1950 Vt. LEXIS 152 (Vt. 1950).

Opinion

Jeffords, J.

This is a suit in equity brought to determine a certain boundary line and the rights of the parties in and to a driveway. A decree favorable to the plaintiffs was entered and the case *304 is here on the exceptions of the defendants. At the hearing before us all questions relating to the decree as far as the boundary line is-concerned were waived.

The facts here material as found by the chancellor are as follows : The plaintiffs and the defendants are neighbors. The premises; of the plaintiffs are immediately north of those of the defendants-, and both front on the easterly side of North Main Street in St. Al-bans. The plaintiffs have had their title since June 12, 1943, and the defendants have had theirs since April 18, 1925. Both titles-trace to Eliza M. Stonegrave who once owned the land comprising' both properties. In October, 1919, she conveyed the lot now owned by the plaintiffs to Charles and Mary Warner. In the deed (DeftsA Ex. C) the following language appears: “The driveway on the los herein conveyed is to be used in common with the lot adjoining orathe south (not herein conveyed).”

The chancellor found that by the above quoted language the grantor retained a right to use the driveway as the owner of the lot on the' south. He also found that this language is not in itself sufficient to create a right running with the land and that the grantor never intended nor attempted to make it run with the land and made-no mention of this right in her deed to the defendants of April 18,,. 1925.

The chancellor then found that if the defendants did acquire a right to use the right of way over the plaintiffs’ premises in common5 with the plaintiffs, or their predecessors in title, that such right has-been extinguished by adverse possession or abandonment, or both. An express finding was made that the plaintiffs’ use, and that csf their predecessors in title, of the driveway on their premises has been open, notorious, continuous, exclusive, and under a claim céT right for a period of more than fifteen years.

Other findings on these two matters we summarize as follows.:. Until just prior to the bringing of this suit, both the defendants and the plaintiffs, and their predecessors in title, regarded the driveway on the plaintiffs’ premises as exclusively the plaintiffs’ and the hatters’ constant and exclusive use thereof was on that basis. The defendants never knew about, claimed or used any right of way on the plaintiffs’ premises until just prior to the bringing of this smt.. In 1925, when the defendants, acquired title to their lot, or soon thereafter, there was a fence constructed between the two lots and the defendants so constructed their house and so maintained tire- *305 fence between the lots, that use of the driveway on the plaintiffs’ lot by the defendants became virtually impractical and it was abandoned by the defendants and a driveway on the southern part of the defendants’ lot was put in use by them. Some fifteen or sixteen years ago the defendants 'reconstructed this fence putting in steel railroad rails in many of the holes where the old posts of the then existing fence had been for many years previously. At the present time on the southerly sides of both premises there are driveways leading into the respective lots from the street. The driveway of each property enables the owners thereof to have all access needed for the full'and reasonable enjoyment of their premises without resort to any other driveway. The defendants personally never made use of the plaintiffs’ driveway. Such use as may have been made of it as a means of reaching the defendants’ house was by tradespeople and the defendants’ child. The use by tradespeople was not made with reference to any right of the parties, nor by any reason of necessity, but because of special convenience. The use made by the child was the wayward use of a boy and of no legal significance.

The first question to be considered is the nature of the right to use the driveway in common set forth in defendants’ exhibit C. The chancellor, in effect, held that this was a right personal to the grantor. To put it differently and more fully, he held that the right retained was an easement in gross and not one appurtenant to> the lot now owned by the defendants. In determining this question the intent of the parties, to be gathered from the nature of the subject matter and the language used in the deed, must control. Hill v. Shorey, 42 Vt 614, 619; Cooney v. Hayes, 40 Vt 478, 482, 94 Am Dec 425; Easements, 17 Am Jur § 10; Easements, 28 CJS page 636 et seq. The chancellor found that the grantor did not intend to make the right run with the lot not conveyed i.e. that the grantor did not intend to create an easement appurtenant to that lot. This! finding is erroneous. There is nothing in the relation of the grantor, Stonegrave, and the grantees, the Warners, to each other, nor ini the nature and character of the right in question, that shows it to be a mere personal right or that it was so intended. There is nothing to indicate that Mrs. Stonegrave had any personal interest in securing a right of way distinct from her interest as owner of the lot not conveyed. A construction that an easement is one appurtenant rather than in gross is favored. See Am Jur and CJS citations, supra. In Cooney v. Hayes, supra, the reserved right, tending *306 more than the one here to lend itself to be construed as personal, was held to be appurtenant. See Deavitt v. Washington County, 75 Vt 156, 53 A 563, for a case where the language used in creating the easement was similar to that here used and the right was held to be one appurtenant.

It is true, as found by the chancellor, that no mention of the right in question was made in the deed from Mrs.. Stonegrave to the defendants. But such mention was not necessary to the passing of the right for, as we have seen, it was a right appurtenant to the land so conveyed and went with it. Deavitt v. Washington County, supra; Dee v. King, 77 Vt 230, 240, 59 A 839, 68 LRA 860 ; Phillips v. Cutler, 89 Vt 233, 235, 95 A 487; Restatement of the Law, Property, Ch. 40 § 487, Comment a.

Moreover, by the habendum in their deed the defendants took the premises “with all the privileges and appurtenances thereof.” As the easement in the driveway was legally appurtenant to the granted premises it was an appurtenance conveyed by the habendum. Szvazey v. Brooks, 34 Vt 451, 454; Haldiman v. Over-ton, 95 Vt 478, 482, 115 A 699.

Since the driveway was in existence at the time of the conveyance from Mrs. Stonegrave to the Warners the easement was ■created by an exception and not as a reservation. Smith's Exr. v. Jones, 86 Vt 258, 259, 84 A 866; Dee v. King, supra. Thus no technical words of limitation were necessary to its creation. Nelson v. Bacon, 113 Vt 161, 170, 32 A2d 140.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.2d 106, 116 Vt. 302, 1950 Vt. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabins-v-mcallister-vt-1950.