Wells v. . Tolman

51 N.E. 271, 156 N.Y. 636, 10 E.H. Smith 636, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 740
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 271 (Wells v. . Tolman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. . Tolman, 51 N.E. 271, 156 N.Y. 636, 10 E.H. Smith 636, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 740 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

O'Brien, J.

In this action the plaintiff sought to establish,, through the decree of a court of equity, the existence of an easement or right of way over the defendant’s land, and to procure an adjudication as to the nature, character and extent of that right

The lands of both parties were originally, and up to the month of April, 1869, one farm of about one hundred acres, including a wood lot of about twenty acres. On that date the then owner of the whole property conveyed the premises now *638 owned by the defendant, consisting of about thirty-five acres, including the north half of the wood lot. This portion of the farm thus became separated from the rest, and the wood lot was divided into what is known in the case as the north half and the south half. Aside from the wood lot this conveyance embraced about twenty-five acres of the original farm, and this part of the land conveyed is known in the case as the east lot. On the same day the then owner conveyed to the > plaintiff the remainder of the property, including the south half of the wood lot. In this division of the farm the south half of the .wood lot conveyed to the plaintiff, consisting of •about ten acres, was entirely detached from the rest of the plaintiff’s land, and could he reached only by passing over the thirty-five acres which the defendant now owns. Before the sale and division of the farm, the then owner used the whole property and had access to the wood lot by passing over the thirty-five acres or some part of it. The road over which he drove in going to and returning from the wood lot thus became more or less defined, so that at the time of the sale ■and division it could be traced and identified.

Since the sale of the twenty-five acres now owned by the ■defendant isolated the south half of the wood lot from the rest of the farm, the owner in making the conveyance under which 'the defendant has acquired his title inserted therein the following reservation: “ Reserving the right of way ■over the east lot to and from the wood lot at all times when said lot is not sown with grain, and at all times when there is sleighing.”

The original owner thus retained the right to have access to the south half of the wood lot by means of this reservation, and this right passed to the plaintiff when the rest of the farm and wood lot was conveyed to him.

The construction and true meaning of the reservation are the ■only questions involved in this appeal. The “right of way” referred to was the track then existing over which the original ■owner passed, and so the courts below have held. The “ east lot ” was the twenty-five acres conveyed to the defendant’s *639 grantors with the ten acres comprising the north half of the wood lot. The time when the right of passage was to be exercised whs at all times when there was sleighing, that is, when there was snow or ice upon the road or way theretofore fixed and identified by practical location, and at all other times when the same way or track was not “ sown with grain.”

The defendant’s farm of twenty-five acres was subjected by the grant to an easement in favor of the owner of the remaining lands, but the right of way was qualified and limited by restrictions as to the time and manner of enjoyment. It could be used at all times during sleighing, and at other times when the land was not sown to grain. The purpose was to secure access to a wood lot, and that was sufficiently attained by limiting the time of use and enjoyment to the winter months, or, at all events, to that part of the year when the land was not under cultivation for grain crops. It is perfectly evident that the parties to the deed containing the reservation of the easement intended that the grantee of the twenty-five acres should have the right to plow and sow the land embraced within the limits of the way as theretofore used, in the regular and ordinary way of husbandry, and that during the time it was sown to grain the right of passage was suspended. The language of the restriction is not open to any construction that would deprive the defendant of the use of his land for the ordinary purposes of husbandry, and there is no reason apparent in the case why the courts, by construction, should convert an easement, carefujly qualified and limited by clear language, into a general and unrestricted right of way. (Herman v. Roberts 119 N. Y. 37; Mansfield v. Shepard, 134 Mass. 520.)

Upon a careful examination of the record it will be seen that there is no allegation in the complaint, or finding of fact, that the defendant ever refused to allow the plaintiff to pass over the land at the times mentioned in the grant. The plaintiff does not allege, and it has not been found, that the defendant in any way interfered with the use of the right of way as reserved, that is to say, during sleighing, or when the land *640 was not sown to grain. What the jDlaintiff realty claimed and sought to establish in this action was something more extensive than can be deduced from the reservation in the grant upon which the easement depends. In other words, he claimed the general and unrestricted right of way by prescription, or, in the language of the complaint, the right of passage “ over and upon said right of way and easement with his teams and otherwise as he saw fit and proper, at all times and and in all seasons, irrespective of crops, snow or otherwise.” He also claimed a right of way by necessity, but he failed to allege, and the record is silent with respect to any act on the part of the defendant in violation of the reservation in the deed.

The trial court held that the plaintiff was not entitled to a right of way by prescription or necessity, but confined the plaintiff to such rights or easements in the defendant’s lands as were supposed to be reserved in the grant already referred to. But the courts below have apparently given to this reservation a construction which secures to the plaintiff all that lie asked by prescription or necessity. This is not so apparent from the opinion as from the findings and judgment. It will be seen that at least two points are decided by the judgment which virtually confer upon the plaintiff the right to use the easement at all times, and thus converts what was a qualified and limited right of way into a general one, and practically nullifies the restrictions as to user contained in the deed creating the easement.

(1) It has been held that the restriction against the use of the easement when the east lot is sown to grain applies only when the whole lot is devoted to that purpose. This means that if the defendant uses any part of the twenty-five acres for pasture, meadow or root crops the easement becomes general for all purposes, and the exception in regard to the use when the land is sown to grain has no application. In other words, unless the defendant devotes every foot of his small farm to grain crops he must lose the benefit of the exception. This is an extreme, and, as I think, unwarranted construction of the language of the deed, and does violence to the intention *641 of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 271, 156 N.Y. 636, 10 E.H. Smith 636, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-tolman-ny-1898.