Champion v. Munday

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

If A sells a tract of laud to B wliicb. is surrounded by other laud of A, then B is entitled to a passway out through such other land of A. So if A sell laud surrounding other land belonging to him to which he can have access only over the granted premises, he, by implication, reserves a way over the same, although he has conveyed with covenant of warranty. It is a way of necessity.

This case, however, is not either of those stated. The appellee, Mnnday, prior to the sale by him to the appellant, Champion, of the forty-nine acre tract of land, conld pass from his home tract to and over it, and thence by permission over the Graves land to the lane between the Newton and McGarvey land, and by it to the Lexington and Harrodsbnrg Turnpike. His home place .of one hundred and twenty acres did not adjoin any public road. On April 15, 1881, he *33sold the forty-nine acres to Champion, the consideration being, as he says, two thousand dollars, and a passway from his home place through the adjoining-home place of Champion, it to be the one also used by the latter, whose place also did not adjoin any public road, the outlet from it being along the west line of the forty-nine acre tract to the Graves land, .and thence to the turnpike by the route above named. He says that he was also to have one-half of the wheat then on the land. The deed from Munday to Champion, dated April 15, 1881, recited the consideration as eighteen hundred dollars; but this does not prevent other or further consideration from being shown. (Davenport v. McCampbell, 17 B. M., 42; Gordon’s Heirs v. Gordon, 1 Met., 287.) The parties agree that the money to be paid was two thousand dollars. The appellant in his pleadings denies that the appellee was to have a passway of any character, either personal to him and his family or one appurtenant to his home place, through the home place of the appellant. In his testimony, however, he substantially admits, and his able counsel appears to assume in the argument, that the appellee and his family were to have the right to pass through, but that the privilege was to be confined to them, and be a mere permissive passway. So that we may regard the question as being whether the contract was for a passway personal to Munday and his family, or one appurtenant to his home place; and if the latter, then whether it can be enforced, as it is not evidenced by any writing signed by Champion. It is hardly reasonable to suppose that the appellee would have sold the forty-nine acre tract, thus cutting *34off Ms outlet from Ms home farm to the public road, without reserving some way of egress from it. He says that he, in the sale of the forty-nine acre tract, and as part of the consideration, bought a passway through the home farm of the appellant. The latter contradicts this, but the deed recites: “The said R. P. Munday is to have a passway from his house as far as said Champion’s land goes to the Lexington turnpike, over the land of said Champion, on the same-route the said Champion now travels.” And the testimony shows that, from the time of the making of the deed until the bringing of this suit, the appellee has-been passing through the home farm of the appellant..

Considering the testimony in the record, the recitation supra in the deed, and the circumstances surrounding the transaction, we- do not feel authorized to disturb the conclusion of the lower court, which found that a passway through the appellant’s land, appurtenant to the appellee’s home place, was a part of the consideration for the conveyance of the forty-nine acre tract of land.

As the deed was not signed by the appellant, nor any writing executed by him evidencing the appellee’sright to the passway, it is urged that the contract is-within the statute of frauds and cannot be enforced. If simply a passway over the land sold had been reserved by the deed, then of course this question would not arise; but the right is claimed to a passway through other land belonging to the appellant. Equity following the law will not enforce a contract within the statute. Here, however, it has been executed upon the part of the appellee, and the appellant accepted *35the deed and had it recorded. There is no oiler by him to rescind. He placed the appellee in the nse of the passway, while he is in possession of the property ; and a court of equity will not, under these circumstances, permit him to hold it, and yet refuse to pay for it. If he declines the one, he must do the other; otherwise, the statute would become a means of injustice, and enable a party to commit a fraud, thus defeating the very object of its enactment.

Judgment affirmed.