Court Opinion

ID: 6746982
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:56:42.69009+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:56.841151
License: Public Domain

OPINION
By WASHBURN, J.
This cause is before this court on an appeal on questions of law and fact.
Lucretia Van Curen (who will hereinafter be referred to as the owner of the dominant, estate) sued Emily Ry-r bak (who will hereinafter be referred to as the owner of the servient estate), and others, who are not here involved, seeking to quiet her title to a spring upon said servient ests/te and. her right to pipe,the water from the same to the highway - separating...said estates, and to use the water from said spring for domestic and farm purposes in and about the buildings located. upon said dominate estate.
More than fifty years ago certain large tiles were placed in said spring and covered oyer, and a pipe was, connected therewith ..and laid -underground on the servient estate to and under the highway and on , the premises, of the dominant estáte, to the buildings .thereon, and ever'since said time, until just before the . bringing of this- suit, the owners and occupiers -of the dominant estate used the water from-said spring for the purposes, hereinbefore set forth-—said, spring being their only source of water - supply,- and during all of said time no owner or occupier of the servient estate in any manner objected, to said use , by.. .the. owners and occupiers of . the. dominant, estate until on or about the 12th day of November,. 1935, when the owner of the servient estate obstructed the natural flow of water from said spring, and claimed to own said spring and to be exclusively entitled to the water therefrom.
Some time in or about the year 1884 the occupier of the servient estate, in plowing and tilling the same, broke in the covering of' said spring, thei’-'w causing the water to be roily and uhj.it for the purposes for which it had been used.
Promptly thereafter the occupier of the dominent estate, without asking permission but without objection, entered upon the servient .estate and repaired and restored said spring, and the use of the water therefrom, for the purposes hereinbefore set forth, continued until the same was obstructed by the owner of the servient estate in 1935, as hereinbefore set forth.
A certain affidavit by the owner of the dominant estate at the time said use of said spring was begun was attempted to be introduced in evidence in the court below by' the counsel for the owner of the servient estate, but said counsel properly admit in this court that the' same is not- competent and consent that the same be not considered, and.with that eliminated there is no evidence as to the circumstances under which the yge of. said spring by the dominant estate" was bégun.
If, in the beginning, said..use was. by positive as distinguished from negative permission and hag .always remained so, then the use was’not. adverse and .under a claim,..of ri^ht, and’the owner of the. dominánt estate would acquire, no easement right by ' prescription.'.’But, as has been saidi..t,here-is no'evidence that the use of said spring,in it's'inception was permissive in that sense,' arid *343there is evidence in the record not only of fifty years of continuous and exclusive use, but also there is evidence tending to prove that such usé for more than 21 years before 1935 was adverse and under a claim of right rather than by positive permission.
The incident hereinbefore referred to of the accidental breaking in of the spring by the occupiers of the servient estate more than 21 years previous to 1935,' before any controversy arose as to the rights of the parties in reference thereto, and what took place at that time, 'tends strongly to establish that said use, for at least 21 years and possibly for all the years, was not permissive, but was adverse and under a claim of right.
The maintenance of the spring and the use of the water without asking leave and without objection for the period of 50 years, in the absence of evidence as to how it began, is presumed to have been in pursuance of a grant and is evidence of a claim of right, and the burden of showing the contrary is upon the owner of the servient estate.
See Pavey v Vance et, 56 Oh St 162.
One other fact perhaps should be mentioned: which is that during ail of said time said use was exclusive, and no owner or occupier of the servient estate made or attempted to make any use of the water from said spring.
It should also be observed that the dominant estate was owned by one owner only, for a period of more than 40 years of the time referred to, during which the use of the spring as hereinbefore set forth continued. In view of that fact, it is not.- important that the present owner of the dominant estate and her immediate predecessor in title used the spring for only a.short time.
Whatever the law may be in other states, it is settled.in Ohio that privity that will permit the taking of possession of a claimed easement or right in • ad joining lands, exists between -a vendor and a vendee,-evem though the deed makes no mention of such possession or any right to such easement. This court so decided on June 30, 1924, in the case of Hachtel v Pride et, wherein one of counsel for the appellee in the instant case was one of counsel for the defendants; and the Supreme Court has since so held in the case of Zipf v Dalgran, 114 Oh St 291. And that proposition is especially so .if, at the time the deed is made, the grantor had a right to such easement by .prescription based upon his own personal adverse possession for more than 21 years.
The facts, as shown by the evidence, that the present owner of the dominant estate knew at the time she acquired title that the present owner of the servient estate claimed to be the owner of the spring and to have the right to prevent the use thereof by the owner of the dominant estate, and that the owner of the dominant estate offered to purchase from the owner of the servient estate the right to use said spring, while admissible, are not persuasive when the whole record in this case is considered.
At the time of such negotiations, the title by adverse possession of successive owners and occupiers of the dominant estate for the statutory period had become perfect before the present owner acquired title. Under such circumstances, such negotiations, instead of being an admission of the nonexistence of any fact necessary to the establishment of a title by prescription, are more in the nature-of an effort to buy peace, or, in other words, save the hazard and expense of a lawsuit.
Upon the record in this case we find that for more than 21 years said use was adverse and under a claim of right, and was with the knowledge and acquiescence of the owners and- occupiers of the servient .estate, and was continuous and uninterrupted; and as , • - . a conclusion of law we find that the owner of the- dominant estate has aecraired a right or easement by prescription in the servient estate to maintain said spring as it is now main*344tained, and to pipe the water from same ■ to the dominant estate and use it as it is now being used.
A decree may be rendered accordingly’ and enjoining the owner of the servient estate from interference with the exercise of such right or easement.
STEVENS, PJ. & DOYLE, J., concur.