Zurn Industries, Inc. v. Lawyers Title Insurance

514 N.E.2d 447, 33 Ohio App. 3d 59, 1986 Ohio App. LEXIS 10203
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 1986
DocketC-850667
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 514 N.E.2d 447 (Zurn Industries, Inc. v. Lawyers Title Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zurn Industries, Inc. v. Lawyers Title Insurance, 514 N.E.2d 447, 33 Ohio App. 3d 59, 1986 Ohio App. LEXIS 10203 (Ohio Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Hildebrandt, J.

The issue in this case is whether, under the law of Ohio, a grantor, by a single instrument of conveyance, may grant a fee simple estate in land to one party and reserve an easement in favor of a third party. We hold that the grantor may create both interests with a single conveying instrument.

The record discloses that the grantor, Harriet Keller, was the owner of several parcels of real property situated in Springfield Township, Hamilton County, Ohio. In 1950, Keller conveyed a parcel of land to Justus Goebel and Howard Rabe (hereinafter “Parcel 26”). 1 In 1951, Keller conveyed to the Kroger Company an adjacent parcel of land (hereinafter “Parcel 27”). 2 In the deed to Kroger, Keller reserved a fifty-foot driveway for herself and for the present and future owners of Parcel 26. 3 The *60 driveway, located on Parcel 27, was used as ingress and egress by the owners-occupiers of Parcel 26.

In 1983, Rabe and others by deed conveyed Parcel 26 to appellant Zurn Industries, Inc. (“Zurn”). Zurn insured Parcel 26 under title insurance issued by the appellees. Also in 1983, it was contemplated that Zurn would sell Parcel 26 to the Mohawk Machinery Company (“Mohawk”). Pursuant to that proposed transaction, a title examination was accomplished because Mohawk was concerned about its ability to gain access to Parcel 26 over the driveway on Parcel 27. At the conclusion of the examination, the examiner rendered the opinion that the ingress-egress easement in Keller’s deed to Kroger was not effective, and resul-tantly there was no easement to convey to Zurn.

The title examiner’s opinion prompted Zurn to file a declaratory judgment action in the court below in which it sought a judgment declaring that it had an easement over Parcel 27 by grant or by prescription. 4 By its judgment entry of December 19, 1983, the court found that “the subject ingress-egress easement has been used openly and notoriously, under claim of right, for a period in excess of the period of prescription under Ohio law.” The court then ordered that Zurn be granted “a perpetual easement for ingress, egress, street and roadway purposes over the extreme northerly fifty feet of [Parcel 27].” On December 23, 1983, Zurn sold Parcel 26 to Mohawk.

On May 11, 1984, Zurn filed its complaint against the appellees, alleging that Zurn’s title was unmarketable and that as a result thereof it sustained damages, including attorney fees, additional property taxes and loss of interest caused by the delay in closing on the property pending the disposition of the declaratory judgment action. Subsequently, the appellees filed a motion for summary judgment, followed by Zurn’s motion for partial summary judgment and its memorandum in opposition to the appellees’ motion.

On August 26, 1985, the court below placed of record its judgment entry granting the appellees’ motion for summary judgment and overruling Zurn’s motion. In so ruling, the court observed that “by a single instrument of conveyance, there may be created an estate in fee in one person and an easement in another. This is not prevented by the fact that the conveyance of easement is, in terms, a reservation to the person to whom it is conveyed.” (Citation omitted.) The court specifically did not address appellees’ argument that the title insurance policy did not insure the easement. 5

From that judgment, appellant *61 Zurn brings this timely appeal asserting in a solitary assignment of error that the trial court erred in granting appellees’ motion for summary judgment. We are not persuaded.

From our research we discover that the issue presented for our review has not been addressed in a reported decision by the Ohio courts in the last thirty-six years. Further, the matter has not been revisited by a Hamilton County court since perhaps 1851. 6

In Kirk v. Conrad (App. 1931), 9 Ohio Law Abs. 717, the grantors, the Leutholds, in 1923 deeded certain real estate to the grantees, the Karstetters, <(<*** suj^ec¿ t0 location of garage and use of driveway in common with owner adjoining said driveway.’ ” Id. at 717. The adjoining owner was Kirk, to whom Godfrey Leuthold had under a 1921 contract granted the right to use the driveway and garage.

In 1924, the Karstetters deeded the property to Henry Conrad and his wife. That deed provided in part: “ ‘The use and ownership of the south half of said garage is vested in the grantee herein, and the use of said driveway is in common with the adjoining lot owner [Kirk]; said driveway being located on and along the boundary line between the two lots.’ ” Id. Kirk brought an action against the Conrads to determine Kirk’s rights with respect to the use of the driveway.

In deciding the issue, the Court of Appeals for Crawford County reasoned that whatever rights Kirk had in the premises existed by virtue of the 1921 agreement between Kirk and Godfrey Leuthold, and that since the instrument was not witnessed or acknowledged, it did not protect Kirk’s claim even if the Conrads had notice of the contract. 7 Id. at 718. The court determined that the agreement created only a license for Kirk to drive over the driveway, which was revocable at the Conrads’ pleasure. Id. The court also determined that the references in the deeds were of no legal value. Relying on Yeager v. Tuning (1908), 79 Ohio St. 121, 86 N.E. 657, the court concluded that a reservation in favor of a third person not a party to the deed was void. Id.

However, the issue in Yeager, supra, did not involve a written deed containing a reservation of an easement. Rather, the plaintiffs there contended that they were entitled to specific performance of an oral agreement among several adjoining landowners to erect and maintain telephone poles on their respective lands, and to contribute equally to the expense of stringing wires thereon. In affirming the lower court’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’ petition, the court determined that the oral agreement created a license which was revocable by the licensor.

The case of Cincinnati v. Lessee of Newells’ Heirs (1857), 7 Ohio St. 37, was also cited by the court in Kirk v. Conrad, supra. We find it also to be distinguishable from the cause sub judice. There, the deed from the grant- or conveyed a lot, but reserved “a 33-feet [sic] street in the north or upper side of the southern line of said lot, for the use of the public, in lieu of * * * [another] street * * 7 Ohio St. at 38.

In holding that the city, which subsequently came into possession of the property as a result of several in *62

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Bluebook (online)
514 N.E.2d 447, 33 Ohio App. 3d 59, 1986 Ohio App. LEXIS 10203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zurn-industries-inc-v-lawyers-title-insurance-ohioctapp-1986.