In this case, the Sibley Soap Company filed a bill in equity in a state court against the American Steel Foundries, to restrain the steel company from obstructing, by building, the soap company’s use of a street abutting on its property. On petition of the steel company, alleging it was a corporate citizen of New Jersey and the soap company of Pennsylvania, the case was removed to the court below. On final hearing, that court granted the injunction prayed for, whereupon the steel company took this appeal.
The question involved is one of title and easements vested under certain deeds from a common grantor to both parties, and the determination of that question turns on the application to those deeds of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Stated in general terms, the law of Pennsylvania is that, where an owner of lands grants a part of it, and designates as a boundary of the part sold a street on the part of the land which he retains, a right of way or easement to such street or way passes to the grantee by operation of law and the grantor cannot thereafter be heard to say no such street exists. In that connection, it suffices to refer to In re Opening of Brooklyn Street, 118 Pa. 646, 12 Atl. 666, 4 Am. St. Rep. 618, where it is said:
“If the question were one between a grantor and grantee, and involved a right of way over the street upon which the land convoyed bordered, of course the grantor must make good his covenant that there was a street corresponding with tlie one described in the (Iced. "But that is the law, not upon the theory of a dedication to public use, but upon the implied contract between the parties. As between them, every consideration requires that if the ground conveyed is described as bordering upon a street, the street should be there in compliance with the description.”
Such being the law of the state, it is shown that Grimm, the common source of title of both plaintiff and defendant, by deed dated December 16, 1897, conveyed to the predecessors in title of the Sibley Soap Company, a lot of ground:
“Beginning at a point south 85 degrees 10 minutes and DO seconds east, 25 feet from the northeast corner of land bargained to be sold by Daniel Grimm to the Franklin Steel Casting Company, the said po'mi being the east side of a 40-foot street as agreed upon by said company with said Grimm; * * * thence south 86 degrees 15 minutes 10 seconds west 70.!) feet, to the east lime of said 40-foot streetj and thence by the east lime of said 40-foot strdet,” etc.
*72 [1] This description located the western line of the lot sold as abutting on the east line of the 40-foot street. This deed the purchaser recorded on December 22, 1897. Under the then adjudged law of Pennsylvania, the grantees of said lot acquired thereby an easement or" right of way of which the grantor could not, and did not, deprive them, when, by his deed of November, 1900, he conveyed to the predecessor in title of the American Steel Foundries all his interest and title to a 20-foot strip of land which abutted the western line of the soap company’s lot, which strip was the locus in quo from building on which the plaintiff sought, by his bill, to restrain the defendant. On the face of their deeds and under the decisions of Pennsylvania, the court below was right in holding the easement or right of way of the plaintiff to this 20-foot street strip was established and paramount to any subsequent grantee from Grimm. The soap company’s deed was prior in time and prior on record, and must therefore prevail, unless the force-of. such prior deed and record is in some way avoided.
[2] This the defendant seeks to do by charging the plaintiff with notice of an earlier agreement on the part of Grimm, referred to in his deed to the plaintiff’s predecessor already quoted, viz.:
“The northeast corner of land bargained to be sold by Daniel Grimm to the Franklin Steel Casting Company; the said point being the east side of a 40-foot street as agreed upon by said company with said Grimm.”
We find nothing in this language which in any way warned the grantee that such agreement in any way avoided the implied easement, which the deed was granting. On the contrary, the language in every way supported and assumed the existence of a 40-foot street, and that in bargaining to sell to the Franklin Steel Company land on the western or opposite side, Grimm had left a 40-foot street whose west line abutted on the east line of the land sold to the Franklin Steel Company.
[3-5] But, assuming the words quoted gave notice to the grantee of the deed of an earlier and adverse agreement, the agreement itself was not given in evidence or its contents revealed on the trial of the case. Hence the court below had in the end nothing but Grimm’s earlier deed before it, and the effect to be given to his own language in a contest between him and his grantee, over the easement claimed. Manifestly, any declarations made by Grimm as to the nature of said agreement in later deeds he made were neither proof of the contents of the agreement nor could such later deeds in any way affect Grimm’s earlier grant
The judgment below is affirmed.