Schmidt v. Hilty-Forster Lumber Co.

1 N.W.2d 154, 239 Wis. 514, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 28
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 154 (Schmidt v. Hilty-Forster Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmidt v. Hilty-Forster Lumber Co., 1 N.W.2d 154, 239 Wis. 514, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 28 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed December 2, 1941:

Fritz, J.

The Hilty-Forster Lumber Company (hereinafter called “Hilty Company”) appeals from a judgment which provided that the plaintiff, Edward Schmidt, has an implied easement by way of necessity over land owned by Hilty Company for ingress and egress to and from his land to Wisconsin avenue. The parcels of land now owned, respectively, by Schmidt and Hilty Company were part of a rectangular tract of 5.67 acres which was deeded to Jennie McAlpin in 1874. The tract then had a frontage of two hundred ninety-five feet on a highway, which is now Wis- *516 consul avenue, and extended northward eight hundred thirty-six feet. In July, 1890, the Milwaukee & Wauwatosa Motor Railway Company acquired an easement by condemnation proceedings for a railway right of way on a fifty-feet-wide strip extending east and west across the McAlpin tract about two hundred four feet south of its north boundary. The damages awarded to Mrs. McAlpin included the value of the easement over the condemned strip and the depreciation in value of her remaining land and improvements by reason of the easement-, but did not include the value of the fee title, which she retained in the strip, nor the value of her right to cross that strip without interrupting the Railway Company’s operations along its tracks, which were laid in a depression cut nine feet below the natural surface of the land.

On April 30, 1907, Jennie McAlpin conveyed by a mortgage to- Citizens Trust Company the parcel north of the railway right of way with the provision, “Excepting a strip of land fifty-five feet wide running north and south through the center of said premises.” By foreclosure proceedings under that mortgage and mesne conveyances, including a quitclaim deed to Edward Schmidt, on October 23, 1916, the title to the north parcel became vested in him subject to the exception as to the fifty-five-feet strip, which was repeated in all of those conveyances by the same language that was used in the mortgage. Plaintiff has continued to own that parcel. It has.not been used for any residence or business purpose and there has been no structure or other improvement thereon.

On July 2, 1910, Jennie McAlpin conveyed by a mortgage to Farwell Investment Company all of the tract south of the railway right of way and extending to Wisconsin avenue, excepting two parcels which are, respectively, in the -southeast and southwest corners of her traer and have a frontage of one hundred twenty feet on Wisconsin avenue and a depth *517 of one hundred sixty feet. In the mortgage there is the provision:

“Also, excepting the right to dedicate and lay out as a public highway a strip of land fifty-five feet in width from east to west, through the center of said premises in a northerly and southerly direction.”

By foreclosure proceedings and mesne conveyances, the title to the tract conveyed by the mortgage became vested in Hilty Company by a warranty deed dated December 31, 1919. In this deed and some but not all of the mesne conveyances, there was the above-quoted provision, “excepting the right to dedicate and lay out as a public highway,” etc., which was in the later mortgage.

■The court found, in addition to the above undisputed facts, that for many years prior to the condemnation proceedings in July, 1890, there was a visible well-defined roadway extending on Mrs. McAlpin’s property from near its north boundary to Wisconsin avenue, which was continuously used by her and by others' entering and leaving her premises; that it was her intention, in executing the mortgages mentioned above that the roadway be preserved as a right of way for the benefit of future owners of the tract north of the railway right of way; that after the easement was acquired by the Railway Company, and until Mrs. McAlpin finally disposed of her title, she and others, who called at her residence south of the railway’s right of way, used the fifty-five-feet-wide north-and-south strip of land as a driveway from her residence to Wisconsin avenue; and that such use as a driveway and way of ingress and egress to and from the parcel lying north of the railway right of way was continued by all subsequent owners of the McAlpin tract, subject to the limitation and interruptions and temporary nonuse in that the Railway Company erected wire fences along the north and south sides *518 of its right of way across the McAIpin tract and also fences or barricades and danger signs at the east boundary line thereof, all of which structures were so placed for the sole purpose of protecting the public from danger and not for the purpose of claiming title to the fee of the right of way strip, or of excluding owners of the parcel lying north thereof from crossing' in a northerly or southerly direction the railway right of way when such crossing could be made without interfering with railway operations. In this connection the court stated,— although it is obviously its conclusion as to a matter of law, — that such owners continued to possess the right to cross the railway right of way whenever proper provision should be made and proper facilities provided at their own cost to so cross without interfering with the railway operations to the fifty-five-feet wide strip for use as a roadway south of the railway right of way. The court also' found that for several years after acquiring title in 1916, plaintiff visited his property intermittently by, at times, driving from Wisconsin avenue to the right of way, and then climbing over the south wire fence erected by the Railway Company, crossing the track and climbing over the north fence onto his own parcel; at times, by walking west from Thirty-Seventh street along the streetcar line, until that approach was interfered with by the barricade erected by the Railway Company at the east boundary line of the McAIpin tract; and at other times by proceeding west from Cedar street, which was north of his property, and going from there over the private lands of others; and that plaintiff’s premises are entirely landlocked and there was not at the time of the first conveyance by Jennie McAIpin of any part of her tract, of thereafter, any way of enabling the plaintiff to enter his premises from, or to leave them to go to a public highway, except over land privately owned outside of the McAIpin tract, and to enter upon or depart from his premises it is necessary to use a reasonable part of the' width of the fifty-five-feet-wide strip *519 extending northward from Wisconsin avenue to the railway right of way and across the latter.

The trial court concluded that the effect of the condemnation proceedings was not to destroy the right of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 154, 239 Wis. 514, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-hilty-forster-lumber-co-wis-1941.