Stueck v. G. C. Murphy Co.

142 A. 301, 107 Conn. 656, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 5, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 142 A. 301 (Stueck v. G. C. Murphy Co.) 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
Stueck v. G. C. Murphy Co., 142 A. 301, 107 Conn. 656, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 64 (Colo. 1928).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The action is one for a declaratory judgment as to the respective rights of the parties to the steps and a part of the landing of a stairway furnishing ingress and egress from the street to the stair *660 way and thence to the second and. third floors of the adjoining buildings owned at present by the plaintiffs and R. S. and L. R. Pease, and also as to the right of the plaintiffs to a substituted way from this stairway landing through the entrance to defendant’s store to the street.

The judgment is not appropriate to an action seeking a declaratory judgment, but in form is such as would be appropriate if the action were one by the plaintiffs against the defendant seeking legal or equitable relief; however, in effect it determines that the defendant is entitled, as against the plaintiffs, to maintain the show window described in the complaint in such manner as to cut off access to Main Street from the stairway substantially as shown on plaintiff’s Exhibit I, and that the plaintiffs, as against the defendant, have a right to' use the stairway for all proper purposes ‘as a way of ingress and egress to and from the street, substantially as indicated on this exhibit. The judgment should also specify the duration of the parol license and the substituted easement of way as limited to the term of the lease to the Evans Company as found by the trial court.

The lease to the Evans Company is not made a part of the record. It is difficult to support the finding that, in leasing the ground floor of their building to the Evans Company, R. S. and L. R. Pease included the entrance from the street and the landing furnishing access to the stairway, since the entrance from the street and the stairway were not connected with the store or basement leased by the Evans Company, but separated by a solid wall, and this Company had no occasion to use this entrance or stairway and so far as appears never did use them and since the owners of the building retained the upper floors of their building, access to which could only be had by the entrance and *661 stairway. Whatever the proper construction of this lease in this particular, it would not affect the conclusion we reach upon the facts found. The rights of these parties are to be determined, as prayed for, upon the facts found. In an action for a declaratory judgment, we are not limited by issues joined, or by the claims of counsel. The finding is that Noxon orally agreed with the Evans Company upon the closing of the entrance to this stairway by a show window and the substitution of a means of ingress and egress to and from the stairway through the entrance to the Evans Company store between the new show window and another show window to the street in place of that which had existed since 1827. This was the modification by a parol license of an easement of way by the substitution of another easement of way. The finding is explicit that while the Evans Company, so far as appears, had no written authority to make this agreement, it had the express oral sanction of its landlords to make it. It is also explicit that Noxon thoroughly understood what he was agreeing to, and, further, that he saw daily the alterations being made and at no time objected to them. It also is explicit that he had several interviews with the landlords of the Evans Company and to them expressed his satisfaction with the making of the alterations as planned. In accordance with this agreement and with the full knowledge of Noxon these alterations were begun and completed, without objection from him. The parol licenses thereupon became executed.

The case is not the mere giving of a parol license and its execution by the expenditure of money. In and of itself that would not make a license, otherwise revocable, irrevocable. It is the temporary modification of an easement by grant by a parol license upon the consideration of the giving of a parol license for a *662 substituted easement based upon an oral agreement between the owner of the dominant estate and the tenant of the servient estate acting with full authority from the owner of the servient estate. If the agreement as made were within the statute of frauds, the tenant of the servient estate has fully performed its part of the agreement and with the authority of its landlords, the owners of the servient estate, and thus taken the agreement out of the operation of the statute. Haussman v. Burnham, 59 Conn. 117, 133, 22 Atl. 1065; Hendrick v. Lowe, 85 Conn. 635, 638, 84 Atl. 89. An easement in real estate can be acquired by deed or by prescription. It may be extinguished in whole or part by a written release or by an abandonment of the easement in whole or part, by the owner of the dominant estate. Whether there has been an abandonment depends upon whether the surrounding circumstances show this to have been the intention of the owner of the dominant estate. American Brass Co. v. Serra, 104 Conn. 139, 149, 132 Atl. 565; Schroeder v. Taylor, 104 Conn. 596, 604, 134 Atl. 63; New York, N. H. & H. R. Co. v. Cella, 86 Conn. 275, 279, 85 Atl. 521. The proof of the abandonment must clearly indicate that it was the intention of the owner of the dominant estate to abandon the easement. The grant by the owner of the dominant estate of a parol license to destroy or extinguish an easement in whole or part may effectuate that purpose when the license has been executed by the owner of the servient estate, for these acts are ordinarily inconsistent with any other intention than that of the abandonment of the easement. Curtis v. Noonan, 92 Mass. (10 Allen) 406, 409; Boston & Providence Railroad Corporation v. Doherty, 154 Mass. 314, 317, 28 N. E. 277. The abandonment in law of an easement is the equivalent of the release of the easement. The grant of the license may be by *663 an express written or oral agreement, or it may be established by the circumstances when they clearly indicate the making of the oral agreement.

The trial court has found that Noxon, by consenting to these alterations, intended to waive and abandon pro tanto his right of ingress and egress from the street to the stairway landing during the term of the lease to the Evans Company. This intention is found, as it might well have been, in the express consent of Noxon to the making of these alterations which involved the temporary extinguishment of that part of the easement of the passageway from the landing to the street. The plaintiffs concede that if the parol license had been granted by Noxon to the owners of the servient estate, R. S. and L. It. Pease, and had been executed by them, it would constitute clear evidence of an act of abandonment, but they contend that the Evans Company was without authority to act and that a parol license by Noxon to it was revocable at any time. The claim is predicated upon the principle that an abandonment of an easement can only take place between the fee owners. It overlooks the facts found and relies upon a principle which we do not find to be an accepted principle of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
142 A. 301, 107 Conn. 656, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stueck-v-g-c-murphy-co-conn-1928.