Simmons v. Perkins

118 P.2d 740, 63 Idaho 136, 1941 Ida. LEXIS 74
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1941
DocketNo. 6875.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 118 P.2d 740 (Simmons v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Perkins, 118 P.2d 740, 63 Idaho 136, 1941 Ida. LEXIS 74 (Idaho 1941).

Opinion

BUDGE, C.J.

— This action involves an alleged easement through a portion of Block 7 of Arnold’s Addition to Boise City which block is bound by Pueblo Street on the North, O’Farrell Street on the South, 11th Street on the West, 10 Street on the East. An alley runs in a Northerly and Southerly direction from Pueblo Street to O’Farrell Street, through the center of Block 7. The Northeast quarter of Block 7 is divided into three lots facing 10th Street. The southernmost of these three lots is the one on which appellants and cross-respondents (hereinafter referred to as ‘appellants’) reside. For convenience it will be called Lot 3. The easement which appellants seek to establish, runs along the South side of Lot 3, in an Easterly and Westerly direction, from the center of the alley before mentioned to 10th Street.

About 1893, George Bayhouse owned Block 7, and sold *139 the Northeast quarter of said Block to one Twogood who, in the course of the next five or six years, built three houses thereon, one of which is on Lot 3, and now owned by appellants. At this time, 1893, there was no alley through the Block. On February 15, 1906, George Bay-house executed two instruments to Boise City. One, a deed to an alley, 13 feet 7 inches in width, running through the center of the Block from Pueblo Street to O’Farrell Street. The other, an easement for the laying of a sewer line, running through the center of the Block from 11th Street to 10th Street. This latter instrument contained the following provision, “with the express understanding that the alley in said Block shall run in a Northerly and Southerly direction * * * * That I shall not be required to move any house, or houses, or buildings situate on said block, by reason of said privilege thus given to the City until fully ready to do so of my own free will.”' The house occupied by the Bayhouses was located directly across the alley granted to the City. This house was not removed until 1939 when the entire alley was opened up from Pueblo Street to O’Farrell Street. Prior to this time, however, a part of the alley so granted was opened up from Pueblo Street and connected with the alleged alley to 10th Street.

Appellants became the owners of Lot 3 in 1919 and used the alley here in controversy, as did Bayhouses and others. In April, 1939, respondents and cross-appellants (hereinafter referred to as ‘respondents’) became the owners of the land over which the alleged easement runs, and in September, 1939, they closed up this driveway or alleged easement.

For a better understanding of the location of the alley from Pueblo to O’Farrell, the alleged alley or easement from the center of the Block to 10th Street, the Bayhouse residence, and appellants’ residence we will here insert a plat of Block 7.

*140

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Bluebook (online)
118 P.2d 740, 63 Idaho 136, 1941 Ida. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-perkins-idaho-1941.