Sweeney v. Landers, Frary & Clark

69 A. 566, 80 Conn. 575, 1908 Conn. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 69 A. 566 (Sweeney v. Landers, Frary & Clark) 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
Sweeney v. Landers, Frary & Clark, 69 A. 566, 80 Conn. 575, 1908 Conn. LEXIS 34 (Colo. 1908).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff, by force of the deed to him from the Hanna estate, acquired (1) the fee of a tract of land adjoining East Main Street on the north and bounded on the west, for a distance not stated in the record, by land reserved by the grantor, and (2) a right of way over and across a portion of the land so reserved, to wit, a strip of land twelve feet in width extending along the whole length of said westerly boundary line. The right of way which the plaintiff thus acquired was one appurtenant to the land acquired in fee, and as such attached to each and every portion of it. So far the parties are agreed. Their disagreement results from their differing constructions of the character and extent of the easement acquired. The plaintiff says that the grant was one of a right of passage to or from any point on the west line of the property conveyed to him, o.ver and along the twelve-foot strip, from or to any other point upon or within the boundary lines of the strip. The defendant, on the other hand, contends that the deed gave to the plaintiff the right to pass and repass to or from any point on his said westerly line, over and along the strip, from or to East Main Street, and nothing more. It is in this matter of the interpretation of the grant of the easement contained in the deed of the Hanna estate that the controlling question in the case is found.

To discover the answer to this question we must look to the deed, the situation of the property, and the surrounding circumstances, with a view to ascertaining the intention of the parties. Goodyear v. Shanahan, 43 Conn. 204, 210; Bartholomew v. Muzzy, 61 id. 387, 393, 23 Atl. 604. In the absence of anything in the situation, or surrounding circumstances, to indicate an intention contrary to that to be derived from the ordinary import of the language used, taken in its ordinary and natural meaning, the ordinary *579 import of the language so interpreted will be given to it. Sands v. Lyon, 18 Conn. 18, 27; Holliday v. People, 5 Gilm. (Ill.) 216. In case of doubt, the grant will be taken most strongly'against the grantor. Marshall v. Niles, 8 Conn. 369, 374; Bushnell v. Proprietors of Ore Bed, 31 id. 150, 157.

The grant in this case was expressed to be one of a right of passway for all purposes across the twelve-foot strip. The language used to describe the scope of the easement is thus seen to have been not only free from limitations, but of the most general and comprehensive character. There was nothing in it to intimate that the way was created for any. special purpose, or for the special purpose of providing a means of ingress and egress to or from the plaintiff’s land from or to East Main Street. On the contrary, it is quite suggestive of the absence of the latter as the sole purpose of the grant, that the street is not mentioned in connection with it—not even in the description of the strip itself. The natural and ordinary import of the language of the deed is, therefore, that a general right of passage, for whatever purpose and between whatever termini might best suit the convenience of, or be deemed most beneficial to, the plaintiff as the owner of the adjacent land, was intended to be created.

If we turn to the situation of the property and the parties, and the circumstances surrounding the transaction as disclosed by the record, we find scarcely a fact not apparent from the deed and map, and those so disclosed are few indeed. They are, that the land purchased and reserved was located upon East Main Street in the city of New Britain, that after the sale the land upon the east side of the passway was owned by the plaintiff, that upon the west side and the south or inner end by the Hanna estate, and that at the north end was East Main Street, that the south end of the way touched at one corner the corner of a tract of undisclosed ownership, being tract F., in such a manner that access to it might be had from any portion of the plaintiff’s frontage upon the passway, by the use of the *580 way and a corner of the plaintiff’s land, that the .plaintiff’s tract had an ample frontage upon East Main Street and full access thereto from every part of it. Here the story ends,' unless a recital in the agreement of April 22d, 1905, be accepted as adding the fact that a dwelling-house stood upon tract C. No other information is vouchsafed as to the character, use, or occupation of the surrounding land. Prom such meagre data it is quite impossible to draw an inference as to the intention of the parties in making the grant of the way, so satisfactory as to justify a conclusion at variance with the ordinary and natural import of the language employed by them;

The defendant’s brief states that the land bordering upon the way was unimproved, and upon this situation ■argues that it cannot reasonably be supposed that it was intended to give a right of way from a point upon the plaintiff’s land to any other point upon the limits of the. twélve-foot strip, save only East Main Street, because, as it is said, all such journeys would be pointless and purposeless. If it be assumed that the undisclosed facts .were as stated, and that for the time being a use of the passway for passage to and from the plaintiff’s land from and to the Hanna land could not have been beneficial to the owner of the plaintiff’s land, it yet remains that the right to use the way as between the various points on the plaintiff’s pass-way frontage could not be assumed to have been a valueless thing, and, what is of more importance, that there are present even in the meagre facts recited indications that the grant was made more with a view to the future than to the -present. Here was city property adjacent to a city street apparently a main thoroughfare. The parties might quite naturally have been looking forward to a time when the plaintiff’s ability to subdivide his passway frontage would be a valuable right—when such subdivision of the frontage upon all sides of it might be made and the surrounding land developed and built upon. Under such conditions the value of the passway lay not only in the fact that it would furnish a -means of communication between *581 each of the subdivided tracts and East Main Street, but in the further fact that it furnished all the privileges of a way-general upon which the right of passage to and fro in whatever direction and between whatever termini existed. It is scarcely to be believed that the parties were contemplating the creation of a right of way limited in its scope and inadequate for the purposes of a future development such as indicated.

The defendant’s brief makes the additional statement that it is obvious that the defendant owned the tract F., and that as a great manufacturing concern it needed opportunity to grow. If this fact is obvious, or was true, the proximity and situation of this great manufacturing establishment bring added emphasis to the suggestions just made, and render it quite certain that the parties, in the exercise of a reasonable foresight, were providing for a right of passage of a comprehensive and not limited character.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A. 566, 80 Conn. 575, 1908 Conn. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeney-v-landers-frary-clark-conn-1908.