Court Opinion

ID: 7135664
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:23:37.621419+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:37.130349
License: Public Domain

■Opinion of the court by
JUDGE PAYNTBR
'Reversing.
The appellant, Asher, was largely engaged in the timber and lumber business. He desired to construct a tramroad about seventeen miles long, for the purpose of hauling his lumber products to a railroad for shipment. To do so it -was necessary to secure the right to construct the tramroad ■over the lands of the appellee Carnes. Thereupon Carnes *704executed and delivered to the appellant a writing, which reads as follows: “Pineville, Bell county, Ky., May 22,. 1900. I, J. L. Carnes, this day agree with A. J. Asher and obligate myself to allow A. J. Asher to enter my field at lower end of meadow on the left side of the creek, coming up creek, and proceed up through field to the upper end of same and out. Asher is to be allowed to build a tramroad through the field, to be operated with tramears, to be pulled by mules and horses, over which to haul logs, lumber, feed and goods. Asher is not to put any rocks in said road, and is to put a gate at each end of field, and is to pay any damage done to Carnes’ land or crops by said gates being left open, and to be allowed to pass up creek to Botner Bingham’s land. Consideration for said privilege to be $35 per year. Time of lease not to exceed three years. J. L. Carnes.” Asher constructed his tramroad, covering the distance of seventeen miles, which in part was over the land of Carnes mentioned in the contract. He continued to use his tram-road for the purpose of transporting his lumber until September, 1903, when the appellee prevented him from using' it over the Carnes land, necessitating the unloading of the cars at the point of entry upon the Carnes land, and hauling, it by wagons around it to the tramroad, and again loading it upon the tramears to be carried to the railroad, thus causing loss and damage to the appellant. The appellant paid the stipulated rent for three years, and avers that he is-ready and willing to pay for the year beginning May 22, 1903. The facts detailed are substantially averred in the petition,, to which the court sustained a demurrer. To review that action of the court the appeal is prosecuted.
The theory of the appellee is that the writing which Carnes, gave Asher is a license, but, if not that, it is an easement for the period of three years, determinable at the will of the ap*705pellee. The appellant claims that it is a lease. Therefore, having remained in possession from the date of its expiration, May 22, 1903, until September, he was, by virtue of the statute, entitled to hold it for one year after the expiration of the lease. 5 Lawson on Rights and Remedies, sec. 2668, defines a license as follows: “A license is an authority given to do some act or acts on the land of another, without giving any estate in the land itself. It differs from an easement in that the latter is a permanent interest, with a right at all times to enter and enjoy it, while the continuance of the former depends on the will of the person who has created it.” There is a distinction between an “easement” and a “license,” although in some cases it is difficult to see a substantial difference between them. An easement is a privilege in land founded upon a deed or other writing, or upon a prescription. Hazelton v. Putnam, 54 Am. Dec., 158. An easement is a permanent interest in another’s land, with the right to enjoy it fully and without objection. An easement may attach to the land, and pass with the dominant tenement, as an appurtenance thereto. The writing in question gave Asher the right to enter upon and take possession of a strip of the grantor’s land, and occupy it with his tramroad for a period of three years, at a stipulated rental. Asher had the actual possession of the strip of land so occupied, as completely as he would have had had he raised corn or other products upon it. He enjoyed the profits of the strip occupied by him as much as he would have done if he had cultivated it. Bouvier defines a lease to be “a species of contract for the possession and profits of lands and tenements either for life or for a certain term of years, or during the pleasure of the parties.” In Waller v. Morgan, 18 B. Mon., 136, the court said: “To create the relation-of landlord and *706tenant no particular words are necessary, but it is indis* pensable that it should appear to have been the intention of ■one party to dispossess himself of the premises, and of the •other to enter and occupy as the former himself had the right to do, pursuant to the agreement between them.” In •order that Asher might have become Carnes’ tenant, it was not necessary for him to take possession of Carnes’ entire farm. He could become a tenant on a part of it, as well ■as of the whole, depending upon the terms of the contract. The contract contemplated that he should take possession of the land for three years at a fixed rental. We conclude that the contract was a lease, and Asher was Carnes’ tenant. Section 2295, Kentucky Statutes, 1903, reads as follows: “If, by contract, a term or tenancy for a year or more is to expire on a certain day, the tenant shall abandon the premises on that day, unless by express contract, he secures the right to remain longer. If, without such contract, the tenant shall hold over, he shall not thereby acquire any right to hold or remain on the premises for ninety days after said date, and the possession may be recovered without demand or notice, if proceedings are instituted within said time. Rut If proceedings are not instituted within said time, then none shall be allowed until the expiration of one year from the •day the term of tenancy expired; and at the end of said year the tenant shall abandon the premises without demand or notice, or stand in the same relation to his landlord that he did at the expiration of the term or tenancy aforesaid; and so from year to year until he abandons the premises, is turned out of possession or makes a new contract.” Asher having remained in possession of the land for ninety days .after the expiration of his lease, he was entitled to remain •'for one year thereafter. It is suggested that the statute was intended for the benefit of the tillers of the soil, as it would *707be supposed that if the tenant remained on the premises during that period be would have pitched his crop, therefore should not he disturbed in the enjoyment of the premises, for the year ensuing the expiration of the lease. This may have been the consideration which induced the enactment of the statute, but its terms are broad enough to cover other-leases. It applies to a case where a house is rented without a foot of ground attached to it susceptible of cultivation. It necessarily applies to the case under consideration. In our-opinion the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the petition.
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.