[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 288 The deed from the defendant to Michael Newman, described the premises conveyed by metes and bounds and as containing about five-eighths of an acre of land, but made no reference to any street or streets, or to any map. In 1864, at the date of the deed, the defendant owned the land on the south side of the granted premises, but no street had then been opened thereon along the southerly bounds of the lot conveyed. The grantee did not, therefore, acquire a right of way from the "Stone Arabia" road over the lands of the grantor adjacent to the granted premises by force of the deed. Such an easement by the common law can be created only by grant, or prescription, or by dedication to the public.
The case is not within the doctrine that where the owner of a tract of land lays it out into lots or streets, and afterward conveys lots, bounding them on the streets so laid out, or by reference in the deed to a map on which the streets are designated, he impliedly grants an easement in the streets to the purchaser. This doctrine proceeds on a construction of the grant itself, and a conveyance by such a description is held to constitute as between the grantor and grantee, and as to the *Page 290 lots conveyed, an irrevocable appropriation of the spaces designated as streets or ways appurtenant to the land conveyed. (Wyman v. Mayor, etc., 11 Wend. 487; Story v. ElevatedR.R. Co., 90 N.Y. 122, and cases cited.) In this case there was not only an absence in the deed of any reference to a street or way over the southerly side of the granted premises, but there was no apparent easement on that side, with reference to which the parties could be assumed to have contracted.
The right of the plaintiff to maintain the action cannot therefore, be sustained on the theory of an actual grant of the way in question by the defendant. But it appears by the complaint (which, for the purposes of this appeal, is to be taken as true) that during the negotiations between the defendant and Michael Newman, the plaintiff's husband, for the sale of the lot by the former to the latter, the defendant represented to Newman that the lot was a corner lot, situated on the corner of two streets or highways, viz.: the "Stone Arabia" road, an ancient highway on the westerly side of said lot, and a road running easterly therefrom, thirty-five feet wide, along the southerly bounds of the lot, and promised him that he would shortly thereafter open the latter for the use and convenience of Michael and his family, his assigns, and the public; that the said Michael, relying upon such representations and promises, was induced to purchase the lot at a large price, and took a deed therefor, and afterward, still relying upon such representations and promises, erected thereon a dwelling-house near the southerly bounds thereof, as was contemplated and understood between the parties during the negotiations for the purchase. It further appears that the defendant sold lots to other persons, abutting on the said thirty-five feet, with similar representations and assurances as were made to the plaintiff, and that in 1866 or 1867 he opened the said space as a street "as the defendant represented, promised and agreed would be done," and the same was thereafter used and enjoyed by the said Michael and his family, and by the public, as an open and public street for the space of about eight years, until 1875, when the defendant obstructed the entrance thereto with rocks *Page 291 and large stones, rendering the access thereto difficult and dangerous, and threatened to wholly close the same by a fence, etc.
It may be conceded that the promise of the defendant made to Michael Newman to open the street, standing alone, would, if unexecuted, be incapable of enforcement. The plaintiff would encounter several difficulties. In the first place she would be met by the objection that the deed was the final consummation of the bargain and merged all prior negotiations and stipulations. If this could be answered by the claim that the promise to open the street was a distinct collateral undertaking, and was not therefore within the rule excluding parol evidence to vary a written instrument (as to which we express no opinion), the further objection affecting the legal validity of the promise would remain, that it related to an incorporeal right in real estate, and, not being in writing, was void by the statute of frauds.
But we know of no rule of law which prevents a party from performing a promise which could not be legally enforced, or which will permit a party, morally but not legally bound to do a certain act or thing, upon the act or thing being done, to recall it to the prejudice of the promisee on the plea that the promise, while still executory, could not by reason of some technical rule of law have been enforced by action.
In this case the promise of the defendant to open the street was specifically performed. His promise entered into the price of the lot, and what he did must be assumed to have been done in performance thereof. There was not only a promise to open the street, but the defendant represented that the space was in fact a street. Upon this representation and promise the purchaser relied, and when the street was opened he used it as a way for himself and his family, without objection, until he conveyed the lot to the plaintiff in 1874, who continued the use until prevented by the defendant in 1875. If the question here was between the defendant and Michael Newman, there would, we think, be no question. The promise to open the street was founded on a consideration and was actually executed. No formal grant of the easement was contemplated. *Page 292 But Michael Newman was put into the possession and enjoyment of the easement and of the land, so far as the nature of the right admitted. The defendant, by opening the street in pursuance of his agreement, appropriated the space as a way appurtenant to the premises, and he could not subsequently recall the dedication. To permit him to do so would operate as a fraud upon his grantee and subsequent purchasers. The court will enforce their rights by injunction, without requiring them to proceed for specific performance, assuming that a formal grant could be compelled at the instance of the owners of the lot. (Hervey v. Smith, 22 Beav. 299; Talmadge v. East River Bank, 26 N.Y. 105;Dempsey v. Kipp, 61 id. 463.)
The right of the plaintiff to maintain the action is questioned on the ground that the right of way did not pass to her by the deed from her husband. The way or street is not mentioned in the deed, nor is the word "appurtenances" used. But the way was an apparent easement at the time the deed was executed, and if it was then legally appurtenant to the lot, or in other words, if it was enjoyed by right by the plaintiff's husband as an appurtenance to the land, it passed by the conveyance of the lot by metes and bounds, although not mentioned and although the word "appurtenances" was not used. (Huttemeier v. Albro, 18 N.Y. 48; 2 Wn. 279.)
We are of opinion that the way having been opened, and the right which before rested in contract having thereby become consummate by the act of the owner of the land, in pursuance of a promise based upon a valuable consideration, although by parol, the easement became a perfect legal right attached to the land, the burden and benefit of which bind the respective parcels and follow the legal title.
The court, we think, erred in dismissing the complaint, and the judgment should therefore be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., absent.
Judgment reversed. *Page 293