464 A.2d 26
(10987)Supreme Court of Connecticut
PETERS, HEALEY, SHEA, GRILLO and CIOFFI, Js.
Where a conveyance of real property describes the property conveyed by reference to a map on which streets are shown, an implied easement over those streets exists only if the conveyor owns the fee to the streets. Because here the common grantor of the property owned by the plaintiffs and of the streets owned by the defendant association over which the plaintiffs claimed an implied easement had conveyed those streets to the association before he conveyed the plaintiffs’ property to their
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predecessors in title, the plaintiffs could not prevail on their claim of an implied easement, a reference in their deed to a plot map which delineated the streets notwithstanding.
Argued April 5, 1983
Decision released August 16, 1983
Action for an injunction restraining the defendant from closing two gates which block the plaintiffs’ access to roads which lead to their home, brought to the Superior Court in the Judicial District of New London and tried to the court, Hendel, J.; judgment granting injunctive relief, from which the defendant appealed to this court. Error; judgment directed.
Richard C. Jacobson, for the appellant (defendant).
Lawrence H. Lissitzyn, for the appellees (plaintiffs).
CIOFFI, J.
The defendant, Miami Beach Association, Inc. (association), is a summer resort community located on the seashore in Old Lyme. The permanent residence of the plaintiffs, Ella L. Stankiewicz and Ronald M. Stankiewicz, is a house upon a lot which fronts on Liberty Street and is bounded on the east by Columbus Avenue and on the west by Washington Avenue. The plaintiffs’ existing driveway exits onto Liberty Street. The defendant association owns the fee in Liberty Street and in those sections of Columbus and Washington Avenues north of Liberty Street. The portions of Columbus and Washington Avenues south of Liberty Street and which abut the plaintiffs’ property are public highways.
On July 2, 1980, the defendant association installed, closed and locked two gates across the southerly side of the intersections of Liberty Street and Washington and Columbus Avenues.[1] Although the gates are situated
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on property owned by the defendant association, given the present location of the plaintiffs’ driveway, they cut off the plaintiffs’ access to the public portions of Columbus and Washington Avenues via Liberty Street.[2] The plaintiffs sought an injunction to prevent the defendant from closing the gates. The court, after a hearing on the plaintiffs’ request for a permanent injunction, granted the injunction permanently enjoining the association from closing the gates. From this judgment, the defendant association has appealed.
Additional material and relevant facts which are not in dispute are as follows: Nunzio Corsino was the common grantor of the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title and of the defendant association. Corsino conveyed, inter alia, Liberty Street and Columbus and Washington Avenues north of Liberty Street to the defendant association on August 16, 1958.[3] Approximately nine years later, on September 18, 1967, Corsino’s estate conveyed the lot presently owned by the plaintiffs to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title, Joseph H. and Arlene Del Biondo.
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Before either of the above-mentioned conveyances, Corsino filed a plot map with the Old Lyme town clerk. The map delineated, inter alia, Liberty Street, both the public and private portions of Washington and Columbus Avenues and the plaintiffs’ lot. Each of the conveyances incorporated by reference either the original map or a revised edition thereof.[4] Neither map shows any gate obstruction.
The plaintiffs acquired their lot from their predecessors in title, the Del Biondos, on May 31, 1975. Their deed incorporated by reference the identical map specified in the Corsino estate-Del Biondo transfer. And, as previously noted, this map delineated Liberty Street as unobstructed. It is by virtue of this deed which incorporated the map that the plaintiffs claim an implied private right of easement to Liberty Street. Accordingly, the plaintiffs assert that their deed gave them the right to unobstructed travel between Liberty Street and the public portions of Washington and Columbus Avenues.[5]
They make their assertion even though the common grantor of the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title and the defendant association conveyed the roadways to the association prior to the lot conveyance to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title.
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The singular and dispositive issue presented in this appeal is whether a grantee of a lot whose deed incorporates a plot map with roadways delineated thereon can by law receive an implied easement over the roadways even though the grantor has conveyed the roadways in fee to another party prior to the lot conveyance.[6]
We have held on prior occasions that when reference to a map is made in the deed which conveys a lot and that map delineates roadways, even though there is no express easement granted, in certain circumstances “`the lot owners acquire the right to have the streets and highways thereafter kept open for use in connection with their lands.’ Whitton v. Clark, 112 Conn. 28, 32, 151 A. 305 [1930].” Gerald Park Improvement Assn. v. Bini, 138 Conn. 232, 236, 83 A.2d 195 (1951). This is so even if at the time of the lot transfer the delineated roadways are not developed. Lake Garda Co. v. D’Arche, 135 Conn. 449, 66 A.2d 120 (1949).[7] The nature of the right obtained by the lot owner is that of an implied easement. See Lake Garda Co. v. D’Arche, supra, 455; Rischall v. Bauchmann, 132 Conn. 637, 644, 46 A.2d 898 (1946). A close reading of the entire records and briefs in those cases where we held that lot owners had such implied easements reveals, however, that the grantors at the time of the lot transfers owned both
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the streets and the lots; Gerald Park Improvement Assn. v. Bini, supra; Lake Garda Co. v. D’Arche, supra; Whitton v. Clark, 112 Conn. 28, 151 A. 305 (1930); or that the grantors reserved a right for others to use the streets conveyed. Peckheiser v. Tarone, 186 Conn. 53, 438 A.2d 1192 (1982). Such is not the case here. In the present case, the common grantor, Corsino, had conveyed away all his interest in Liberty Street to the defendant association prior to transferring the lot to the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title.
It is fundamental that a grantor cannot effectively convey a greater title than he possesses. Short Beach Cottage Owners Improvement Assn. v. Stratford, 154 Conn. 194, 199, 224 A.2d 532 (1966); Martin v. Sterling, 1 Root 210, 211 (1790). As to easements, “[n]o right of way appurtenant can be created without a dominant as well as a servient estate. . . . The dominant estate enjoys the benefit of the way, and the servient estate bears the burden. The way can become legally attached to the dominant estate only if the same person has unity of title to both the way and the dominant estate.” (Citations omitted.) Curtin v. Franchetti, 156 Conn. 387, 389, 242 A.2d 725 (1968). We hold that this fundamental principle of law applies to the present case as well as to express easements. Since the common grantor, Corsino, did not own the streets, i.e., the servient estate, when he conveyed the lot or dominant estate to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title, there could be no implied easement by law over the streets outlined on the map incorporated in their deed. When a conveyance describes the conveyed property by reference to a map on which streets are shown, an implied easement over the streets exists by law, if it exists at all, only if the conveyor in fact owns the streets. See 3 Powell, Real Property 409.
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The plaintiffs assert that the mere filing of the map created a permanent implied easement over the roadways in favor of potential purchasers of the delineated lots and that this easement was created upon the filing of the map. Accordingly, the plaintiffs argue that even though Liberty Street was conveyed to the association prior to the lot conveyance to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title, since the potential lot owners already had an easement over the roadways, the conveyance to the defendant association was encumbered by the claimed easement. This argument is unpersuasive. Indeed, the plaintiffs cite no authority for this proposition, nor can this court find any such authority.
“`It has always been the policy of our law that the land records should be the authentic oracle of title on which a bona fide purchaser . . . might safely rely.’ Safford v. McNeil, 102 Conn. 684, 687, 129 A. 721
(1925).” Peckheiser v. Tarone, 186 Conn. 53, 57, 438 A.2d 1192 (1982). A grantee who takes under a deed referring to a map thus cannot justifiably look only to the map, but must consider it in conjunction with other deeds and documents comprising the chain of title. Indeed, reference to a map in a conveyance normally is utilized merely as a descriptive tool to identify the property and, therefore, does not itself convey. See 23 Am.Jur.2d, Deeds 232.
Accordingly, we hold the following:
(1) The mere filing of a plot map which delineates roadways and lots thereon does not diminish the interest of the fee owner in and to the roadways portrayed on the map; and
(2) An implied easement in such roadways may exist only, if it exists at all, when the grantor owns the fee to the roadways and makes reference in the grantee’s deed to a map which depicts the roadways.
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There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
APPENDIX
[EDITORS’ NOTE: THE MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]Page 173