Winterringer v. Price

370 P.2d 918
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 19, 1961
Docket38720
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 370 P.2d 918 (Winterringer v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winterringer v. Price, 370 P.2d 918 (Okla. 1961).

Opinions

BERRY, Justice.

The parties, who appear here in reverse order to their appearance in the trial court, will be referred to as they appeared in said court.

In 1900, a two-story brick building was constructed on Lots 12 and 13, Block 26, Amended Plat to Shawnee, Oklahoma. The lots are contiguous. As of date of construction and since, the lots have been owned by different persons. Plaintiffs acquired title to Lot 13 on July 19, 1950. Defendant acquired title to Lot 12 on December 17, 1958. The following statement appears in the warranty deed under which defendant took title to Lot 12:

“6. Party Wall Agreement and Easement in the stairway and hall between and located on portions of Lots 12 and 13, Block 26, amended plat to Shawnee, Oklahoma, which easement, if in writing, has been misplaced or lost and is Not Recorded.
“The above grantee by the acceptance of this deed, covenants and agrees that he has received copies of and is familiar with the contents of all documents above referred to except the Party Wall Agreement and easement last above described and in relation to the said easement grantee covenants and agrees that he has made investigations of all interested parties and satisfied himself relative to the existence of said easement and the terms and conditions thereof and accepts the same.”

The brick building was divided by a wall approximately 13 inches wide and the walls of a stairway leading up from a common street entrance to a hall on the second story of the building, thus two buildings were in effect created. There was no firewall separating the buildings and the roof extended unbroken, except for a skylight, over the entire structure. The skylight was near the top of the stairway. One half of the wall, stairway and skylight stood on either lot.

It appears that the buildings were at all times in a good state of repair; that the lower portion of the building was at all times occupied but that some of the office space on the upper floor had remained vacant for a long period of time.

On March 5, 1959, defendant notified plaintiffs in writing that he planned to demolish that portion of the building resting on Lot 12; that he planned to build on said lot a “one-story building of modern de[920]*920sign, which will leave your wall, on the second-floor level exposed to the elements”; that excavation work would be done on the lot; that plaintiffs should therefore take precautionary measures consisting of (1) building a suitable wall to protect plaintiffs’ sheetrock on the second-floor level; (2) relocating the stairway; and (3) “prepare for the support of (plaintiffs’) building during the excavation work”.

After having been so notified, plaintiffs instituted the instant action to enjoin defendant from interfering with or removing the stairway, landing, skylight, hall and party wall or walls. Plaintiffs pleaded that they had acquired a prescriptive easement covering use of said properties in connection with the use of their Lot (13).

By appropriate pleadings, defendant denied that plaintiffs owned the easement upon which their action was predicated. Defendant did not seek affirmative relief.

Following trial of case to the court, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs. The pertinent portion of the trial court’s judgment are findings that “Neither plaintiffs nor plaintiffs’ tenants have made beneficial use of the hallway since 1951; and it is not necessary to the use and enjoyment of plaintiffs’ property”; . that “by reason of the mutual and reciprocal use of plaintiffs and their predecessors in title and defendant and his predecessors in title of the common stairway and second floor landing so located at the property line of the building and one-half on each, the plaintiffs have acquired an easement over and upon the property of the defendant for the continued use of the stairway and second floor landing together with a wall to enclose and support the stairway, which easement is a burden upon the property of the defendant for the uses and purposes of a common stairway and providing access to the upper floor of plaintiffs’ property; and defendant has no right to demolish the common stairway, located upon defendant’s property; even though the rest of the building is being demolished as a part of defendant’s current building program”; that “except for the stairway and reasonable ingress and egress to the upper floor of plaintiffs’ property, plaintiffs have no further rights in or easement upon the property of defendant”; and conclusions that “plaintiffs have an easement over and upon the property of defendant for continued use and occupancy of the common stairway and support thereof between the real properties involved”; that “such easement shall include the existent stairway, as located upon the first floor of defendant’s property; and, at the point where the stairway reaches the second floor, the easement shall extend generally in a northwesterly direction to the property line between the two buildings, a sufficient distance to the north of the stairway to provide reasonable access thereto; and from that point to the north property line of defendant’s property, the plaintiff shall have no further right in or easement upon defendant’s property”; that “upon dismantling of the roof and structure upon defendant’s property, defendant shall provide subjacent support and reasonable and proper protection to the property of plaintiffs from the elements.”

From order of the trial court denying defendant’s motion for new trial which was directed to the referred-to judgment, defendant perfected this appeal.

Defendant contends that plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest had only a license to use that portion of the wall, stairway, hall and skylight which was built on defendant’s lot; that said license was revocable upon reasonable notice; and that the license was in any event extinguishable upon defendant’s electing to build a modern building on his lot.

Plaintiffs contend that defendant’s acceptance of the deed which carried the provisions heretofore quoted “subjected him to equitable principles which he cannot disavow”; that in any event uninterrupted use of that portion of the wall, hall and stairway resting on defendant’s lot for approximately 60 years gave them a prescriptive easement and right to continue to use said property.

[921]*921We will first consider plaintiffs’ contention based on that portion of the deed which is heretofore quoted.

The lawyer who drafted the deed testified in substance that he and to his knowledge his clients who were defendant’s grantors, had no actual knowledge that an agreement had ever been entered into covering reciprocal easements in the wall, hall and stairway; that he wished “to protect (his clients) against any possibility on the warranty, so (he) naturally assumed there would be some sort of agreement whereby those things were put in there” and for said reason made the quoted provisions a part of the deed.

There is no direct evidence sustaining the proposition that an express agreement was entered into covering the matters referred to in the quoted portion of the deed, and the fact that the lawyer who drafted the deed thought that the physical facts indicated that such an agreement had probably been entered into and, therefore, sought to protect his clients on their warranty as to such possible agreement does not serve to establish as a fact that such an agreement was in fact entered into. In 26 C.J.S. Deeds § 140(3), p.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

MacY v. Oklahoma City School District No. 89
1998 OK 58 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1998)
Inhabitants of Town of Sabattus v. Bilodeau
391 A.2d 357 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1978)
Winterringer v. Price
370 P.2d 918 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
370 P.2d 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winterringer-v-price-okla-1961.