Tusi v. Jacobsen

293 P. 587, 134 Or. 505, 71 A.L.R. 1364, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 49
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 293 P. 587 (Tusi v. Jacobsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tusi v. Jacobsen, 293 P. 587, 134 Or. 505, 71 A.L.R. 1364, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 49 (Or. 1930).

Opinions

BELT, J.

Plaintiffs seek to enjoin defendants from using as a road a certain strip of land 30 feet wide off the north end of their land.

For some years prior to 1899, A. C. Fairchild owned approximately 100 acres of land lying just south of the boundary line between Multnomah and Clackamas counties, and east of what is now a prolongation of 92d street in the city of Portland, Oregon. On May 26, 1899, Fairchild deeded to Eva 0. Crawford nine acres located in the northwest corner of the 100-acre tract. This abutted on the county line on the north and, on the west, upon the road which for convenience we will designate as 92d street.

In the deed to Mrs. Crawford the grantor made the following reservation:

“save and except thirty feet wide off the north end and thirty feet off the west side of the nine acres described herein, which thirty-foot strip is reserved for a road. Grantee agrees to open road on north line when present road is closed.”

In 1906 Mrs. Crawford conveyed the property to Richard Meilke, omitting in the deed the words reserving the strip along the north side, but retaining the clause providing that the “grantee will open road on north line when present road is closed. ’ ’ In 1919 Meilke sold the tract to plaintiffs, the reservation being couched in the same terms as that in his own deed. In the *507 meantime, the “old road” had been abandoned and travel was opened np along the north line of plaintiffs’ property, Mrs. Crawford having cleared a strip wide enough for a “wagon track” for that purpose.

In 1905 defendant John C. Jacobsen, by mesne conveyances, acquired the twenty-five-aere tract lying south and southeast of the nine-acre tract belonging to plaintiffs. The relative situations of these properties and the respective contentions of the parties may be more clearly understood by reference to the following plat:

County Line N.

*508 Plaintiffs assert that no easement was granted to defendants by the above reservation and that they have acquired no prescriptive rights. They also contend that whatever rights, if any, defendants might-have had to use this thirty-foot strip as a road were abandoned in 1926 when they agreed to the grading and improving of the fifteen-foot strip and to accept same in lieu of the easement reserved in the deed.

Defendants deny any abandonment and rely upon the easement described in the deed from Fairchild to Mrs. Crawford as being appurtenant to their land. They also allege such easement was acquired by prescriptive use.

The lower court decreed that defendants have an easement for'a fifteen-foot roadway along the north line of plaintiffs’ tract, but enjoined them from using or trespassing upon the remainder of the thirty-foot strip of land. Defendants appeal.

An easement can be created only by a grant, express or implied, or by prescription from which a grant is presumed. In the instant case it was created by virtue of the deed in 1899 from A. C. Fairchild and wife to Eva G-. Crawford. This roadway passed by subsequent conveyance of the nine-acre tract of land without express mention of the same: Thompson on Real Property, § 301. The easement was not a mere personal privilege or right of the Crawfords, but passed with the land.

The vital question, however, is whether such easement is appurtenant to the land of the defendants. No reference to this thirty-foot roadway or description of it is contained in any of the deeds of defendants’ predecessors in title. The original grantor did not *509 describe the land now owned by defendants nor make any reference to it. While some courts have adhered to the strict rule that the conveyance alone must show to what land the easement is appurtenant, the better and prevailing rule is thus stated in 9 R. C. L. 738:

“ * * * an easement is appurtenant if so in fact, although not declared to be so in the deed, and that if the intention is not sufficiently expressed this question may be determined by the relation of the easement to the so-called dominant estate, or the absence of it, and in the light of all the circumstances under which the grant was made.”

As stated in Dennis v. Wilson, 107 Mass. 591:

“When there is in the deed no declaration of the intention of the parties in regard to the nature of the way, it will be determined by its relation to other estates of the grantor, or its want of such relation.”

True, Wagner v. Hanna, 39 Cal. 111 (99 Am. Dec. 354), held that whether an easement is appurtenant or in gross must be determined from the conveyance and not by matter aliunde. This case, however, was practically overruled by later decisions of the same court. In Nay v. Bernard, 40 Cal. App. 364 (180 P. 827), it was said:

‘ ‘ The principle established by Hopper v. Barnes, 113 Cal. 636 (45 P. 874), has been applied in a number of later cases, in all of which an easement conveyed by an express grant was held to have been appurtenant to a dominant tenement by reason of facts appearing aliunde the deed, and notwithstanding that no description of such dominant tenement was contained in the grant: Jones v. Sanders, 138 Cal. 405 (71 P. 506); Jones v. Deardorff, 4 Cal. App. 18 (87 P. 213); Gardner v. San Gabriel Valley Bank, 7 Cal. App. 106 (93 P. 900).”

*510 Also to the same effect see Eastman v. Piper, 68 Cal. App. 554 (229 P. 1002), citing with approval the rule as above stated in R. C. L. In Goldstein v. Raskin, 271 Ill. 249 (111 N. E. 91), it was held that if the dominant estate was clearly made to appear by attendant circumstances it need not be described in the deed creating the easement. The precise question has not been decided in this jurisdiction but the cases of Rall v. Purcell, 131 Or. 19 (281 P. 832), and Abraham v. Abbott, 8 Or. 53, are somewhat analogous.

In keeping with what we deem to be the better rule, we look not only to the deed but to the facts and circumstances under which it was executed to ascertain the intention of the original grantor in the creation of this easement. What was the relation of the easement to the remaining part of the land owned by the grant- or? Was it the purpose of Fairchild to limit the use of the roadway to the owner of the nine-acre tract? Or did he intend to provide means of access to the remainder of his land contiguous to the tract deeded to Eva Gr. Crawford? He well knew that such property would be of little value without means of ingress and egress. There was no need of providing a roadway on the north line of plaintiffs’ land if the easement was intended to be appurtenant solely to such land. A right of way on the west, now known as 92d street, was sufficient. It was always used by plaintiffs in going to and from their property.

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Bluebook (online)
293 P. 587, 134 Or. 505, 71 A.L.R. 1364, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tusi-v-jacobsen-or-1930.