Symmes v. Drew
Symmes v. Drew
Opinion of the Court
afterwards delivered the opinion of the Court. In order to understand the question in the present case, it is necessary to attend with some care to the facts, with a view to ascertain the intent of the parties in the conveyances referred to. The action is case for the obstruction of certain easements claimed by the plaintiff as appurtenant to her estate in Plymouth. It appears, that the whole estate, before the year 1794, was owned by Isaac Symmes, and that the whole of it has come to the plaintiff, except that which was sold by the administratrix for the payment of the debts of Isaac Symmes, and that all that part which was so sold, has come to the defendants. In June, 1794, dower was set off to the widow of the intestate, Joanna Symmes. In this assignment, the southerly half of the dwellinghouse was included, specially described, together with a qualified use of the kitchen, situated in the northerly part of the house, together also with the use of the yard. In November following, the widow and administratr'x, having obtained license to sell a part of the estate of her "ucestate, for the payment of his debts, made her deed of vunveyance to Ellis Holmes and Isaac Symmes, of a certain part of the estate; and upon the construction of this deed, taken in connexion with the assignment of dower, to which it refers, the present question must be decided.
By that deed, the administratrix, reciting her power, conveyed to Holmes and Symmes one half of the dwellinghouse &c. being the northerly half of the same, together with the bakehouse, yard and garden spot and buildings thereon, being all the dwellinghouse, yard and garden spot and buildings that were not assigned and set off to Joanna Symmes, widow &c., as her dower. By the first clause in this description, “ one half of the dwellinghouse ” would have been understood, if not qualified, an undivided half. But it was qualified, by words afterwards introduced, being the northerly half. And this northerly half was not an absolute half, by mathematical admeasurement, but is explained by the subsequent description to be that northerly half which was not set off to the widow for her dower, referring to the document recorded in the probate office. It was in effect an exception out of this northerly half, of all that had been included in the assignment of dower, referring to that assignment. This deed adopted the local description in the assignment, by this reference, to the-same extent as if that description had been repeated. The result of this opinion is, that the words in this latter clause of the description, were words of local designation ; that the grantor did not mean to convey the whole of the house, subject to a life estate of the widow in a certain part described, but meant to convey all that part of the house by local description, which had' not
The whole estate had vested in the heirs by descent, liable to be devested by a sale under a license for the payment of debts. This sale did devest the estate of the heirs, and vest the same in the grantees, to the extent of the operation of this deed, but no further. Then if this description only conveyed that northerly half by local designation, which remained after setting off the southerly half, in which the dower was assigned, the legal consequence is, that the southerly half, as described in the assignment, remained in the widow and heirs, namely, in the widow for her life, with a reversion to the heirs. To this estate, making together an estate in fee, the servitudes or easements out of the northerly half were annexed ; upon the death of the widow, and the consequent termination of the life estate, no merger took place, and the easements still remained annexed to the estate in the hands of the heirs. The estate consequently came to the plaintiff with those easements ; and she is well entitled, upon the facts stated, to maintain her action.
As to the particular grievances complained of, they must depend upon the nature and extent of the easements reserved, to be determined by reference to the assignment.
In that assignment, we can perceive no right reserved for an in door passage to the cellar. There was a right in the kitchen to be used for the purposes of a kitchen, but not for a passage to the cellar. Such a passage was not necessary, there being an outside passage, less convenient perhaps ; but no other is expressly reserved, and we can perceive none by implication. The action on the first count therefore cannot be maintained.
The second and fourth counts, being for interruptions in the use of the kitchen, and of the yard, respectively, are well maintained, these rights being expressly reserved.
The third count, being for an interruption of air and light in the garret, cannot be maintained. The right to the passages and stairways is reserved, but not to the windows. There is nothing to prevent the plaintiff from opening windows into her own part of the garret; and the defendants had a right to separate their own by a partition.
According to the agreement of the parties there is to be a
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Nancy H. Symmes versus William Drew
- Status
- Published