Taylor v. Hays
This text of 551 So. 2d 906 (Taylor v. Hays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A.R. TAYLOR, Jr., et ux.,
v.
Len Ray HAYS and T.D. Lambert.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
David E. Adams, Senatobia, for appellant.
R.M.P. Short, Sardis, for appellee.
Before ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., and ANDERSON and PITTMAN, JJ.
*907 ROY NOBLE LEE, Chief Justice, For the Court:
A.R. Taylor, Jr., and Mrs. Marjorie P. Taylor, his wife, have appealed from a summary judgment entered against them and in favor of Len Ray Hays and T.D. Lambert in the Chancery Court of Panola County, removing an access easement from lands owned by Hays and Lambert. The appellants raise the following issues:
I.
DID THE LOWER COURT ERR IN DENYING APPELLANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT?
II.
DID THE LOWER COURT ERR IN CHANGING THE LOCATION OF THE EASEMENT, WHICH HAD BEEN IN USE SINCE 1967, WITHOUT THE CONSENT OF BOTH PARTIES?
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Prior to April 3, 1967, Mrs. A.G. McDonald owned two contiguous tracts of land in Panola County, Mississippi. Tract 1 was a small lot, which fronted on Sycamore Street in the Town of Como. Tract 2 was adjacent to Tract 1 and was approximately five (5) times the size of Tract 1. There was no entrance or exit to Tract 2 except over Tract 1. Mrs. McDonald conveyed Tract 2 to the appellants with the understanding that the appellants would have access to and from Tract 2 over a drive along the north edge of Tract 1, leading into Sycamore Street. However, no reference to, or condition of, easement was included in the deed from Mrs. McDonald to appellants.
Subsequently, Mrs. McDonald died and Lot 1 descended to the appellee Hays. The permissive use of the drive was continued until the Hays received an offer from Lambert to buy Tract 1 conditioned on the removal of the access route used by the appellants through the years.
The appellants live upon a tract of land approximately one hundred (100) feet from Tract 2, but it is not adjacent or contiguous to Tract 2. Lambert proposed to convey a right-of-way 122 ft. X 30 ft. extending from Tract 2 to Tract 4 to appellants, thereby causing Tract 2 and Tract 4 to be contiguous and providing access to and from Tract 2 by a different route than that over Tract 1. Appellants declined the offer.
There is no dispute in the facts of this case, and the law may be applied upon those facts even though they have not been fully developed. The statement of facts set out in appellants' brief follows:
As stated in the Complaint, the Plaintiff, T.D. Lambert, wishes to purchase certain real property owned by the Plaintiff, Len Ray Hayes, [sic] and others, who inherited this property from a Mrs. McDonald. This property joins other property formerly owned by Mrs. McDonald which was conveyed by Mrs. McDonald to the Defendants, Arthur R. Taylor, Jr. and wife, Marjorie P. Taylor on April 3, 1967. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor owned no adjoining property and with the permission of Mrs. McDonald began using Mrs. McDonald's driveway as ingress and egress to their lot. The Defendants have no other legal means of access to their property.
Sometime after the death of Mrs. McDonald, the Plaintiff, Lambert, offered to purchase the remaining McDonald property if the Taylor easement could be removed and offered to substitute another strip of land to allow the Defendants access from other property acquired by the Defendant, Marjorie P. Taylor, in 1961, in which Mr. Taylor has a homestead interest... . A plat ... shows (A) The property which Mr. Lambert wishes to purchase Tract 1, (B) The lot conveyed to the Defendants on April 3, 1967 Tract 2, (C) The proposed easement Tract 3, and (D) The property owned by Mrs. Taylor with a homestead interest in Mr. Taylor Tract 4.
There being no genuine issue as to any material fact, no testimony was taken and the Court subsequently entered a decree in favor of the Plaintiffs substituting the proposed easement for the existing easement... .
*908 LAW
The appellants contend (1) that the lower court erred in denying their motion for summary judgment and (2) that the lower court erred in changing the location of the easement across Tract 1, which they had used since 1967, without the consent of all the parties.
We find no dispute between the parties as to what the law of this case is. We do not see that the authorities cited are in conflict. First, there must be a clear understanding of the type easement that the facts present to the Court, keeping in mind that there is no written instrument or provision in the original deed constituting an easement.
Mrs. McDonald orally gave the Taylors permission to use her drive across Tract 1 in order to enter Tract 2 from Sycamore Street. Therefore, the appellants have not obtained an easement by prescription, their use having been permissive through the years. The type easement in existence has been named an easement by implication in some cases and in other cases an easement by necessity. We think that, here, we are confronted with an easement by necessity, arising by implication.
In 1897, the case of Pleas v. Thomas, 75 Miss. 495, 22 So. 820 (1897), set forth the general rule that an easement by necessity arises by implied grant when a part of a commonly-owned tract of land is severed in such a way that either portion of the property has been rendered inaccessible except by passing over the other portion or by trespassing on the lands of another. The Court said:
It is well settled law that one who sells a parcel of land to another which is wholly surrounded by the other lands of the seller, impliedly grants a right of way to the interior lot so sold over the exterior lands retained. And when one sells his exterior and surrounding lands, but retains the interior lands for himself, the rule is the same as to a way of necessity over the exterior lands. And when one sells interior lands surrounded in part by the other lands of the seller and in part by the lands of strangers, the implied grant of a way to the interior land exists over the exterior lands of the seller. The reasons need not be sought afar, for they are obvious at a glance, and they are these viz.: (1) The owner of the interior land could neither reach nor use his land unless a way to it existed or was capable of being brought into existence, the right to use, occupy and enjoy being essential to impart value to the land; and (2) this essential right is to be sought in the grant of the seller of the interior lot, and the buyer is not to be driven to seek to acquire a way over the lands of other adjoining owners. Naturally he would have, under such circumstances, no right to make and use a way over the lands of third parties, and, by law, he could only hope to do so by costly and vexatious proceedings, whereas, by the conveyance of the interior lot, everything was granted which was absolutely prerequisite to reaching and occupying and using the interior lot.
75 Miss. at 500, 22 So. at 820. Accord Warwick v. Pearl River Valley Water Supply Dist., 246 So.2d 525, 528 (Miss. 1971), Quin v. Sabine, 183 Miss. 375, 382, 183 So. 701 (1938).
Under the common law, easements or rights-of-way by necessity exist only so long as the necessity exists and the easement by necessity terminates when other access to the land-locked property becomes available. In Thornton v. McLeary, 161 Miss. 697, 702-703, 137 So.
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