THE INDIAN EASEMENTS ACT, 1882
(Act No. V of 1882)
CONTENTS
1. Short
title.
2. Savings.
3. Construction
of certain references to Act XV of 1877 and Act IX of 1871.
OF EASEMENTS
GENERALLY
Dominant and servient heritages and owners.
5. Continuous
and discontinuous, apparent and non-apparent easements.
6. Easement
for limited time or on condition.
7. Easement
restrictive of certain rights.
The Imposition, Acquisition and Transfer
of Easement
11. Lessee.
12. Who may
acquire easements.
13. Easements
of necessity and quasi-easements.
14. Direction
of way of necessity.
15. Acquisition by prescription.
16. Exclusion in favour of reversioner of servient heritage.
17. Rights which cannot be acquired by prescription
19. Transfer
of dominant heritage passes easement.
The
Incidents of Easements
20. Rules
controlled by contract or title.
Incidents of customary easements.
21. Bar to use
unconnected with enjoyment.
22. Exercise
of easement confinement of exercise of easement.
23. Right to
alter made of enjoyment.
24. Right to
do acts to secure enjoyment.
25. Liability
for expenses necessary for preservation of easement.
26. Liability
for damage for want of repair.
27. Servient
owner not bound to do anything.
30. Partition of dominant heritage.
31. Obstruction in case of excessive user.
The
Disturbance of Easements
32. Right to enjoyment without disturbance.
33. Suit for disturbance of easement.
34. When cause of action arises for removal of support.
35.
Injunction to restrain disturbance.
36. Abatement
of obstruction of easement.
Extinction,
Suspension and Revival of Easement
37. Extinction by dissolution of right of servient owner.
40. Extinction
on expiration of limited period or happening of dissolving condition.
41. Extinction
on termination of necessity.
42. Extinction
of useless easement.
43. Extinction by permanent change in dominant
heritage.
44. Extinction
on permanent alteration of servient heritage by superior force.
45. Extinction by destruction of either heritage.
46. Extinction
by unity of ownership.
47. Extinction by non-enjoyment.
48. Extinction
of accessory right.
50. Servient
owner not entitled to require continuance.
Compensation for damage caused
by extinguishments or suspension.
Licences
54. Grant may be express or implied.
55. Accessory
licences annexed by law.
56. Licence
when transferable.
57. Grantor’s
duty to disclose defects.
59. Grantor’s transfer not bound by licence.
61. Revocation
express or implied.
62. Licence when deemed revoked.
63. Licensee
rights or, revocation.
64. Licensee’s
rights on eviction.
THE INDIAN EASEMENTS ACT, 1882
(Act No. V of 1882)
An act to define and amend
the Law relating to Easements anti Licences.
Preamble-Whereas it is expedient to
define and amend the law relating to Easements and Licences. It is hereby enacted as follows:
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title.
-This Act
may be called the Indian Easements Act, 1882.
Local extent. -It extends to the territories respectively administered by the Governor of Madras in Council and the Chief Commissioners of the Central Provinces and Coorg.
Commencement. --It shall come into force on the first day of July, 1882.
2. Savings. -Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to
affect any law not hereby expressly repealed; or to derogate from-
(a) Any right of the Government to regulate the collection, retention and distribution of the water of rivers and streams flowing in natural channels, and of natural lakes and ponds, or of the water flowing, collected, retained or distributed in or by any channel or other work constructed at the public expense for irrigation;
(b) Any customary or other right (not being a
licence) in or over immovable property which the Government, the public or any
person may possess irrespective of other immovable property; or
(c) Any right acquired, or arising out of a relation created, before this Act comes into force.
3. Construction
of certain references to Act XV of 1877 and Act IX of 1871.-All references in any Act or
Regulation to Sections 26 and 27 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877 or to
Sections 27 and 28 of Act No. IX of 1871, shall, in the territories to which
this Act extends, be read as made to Sections 15 and 16 of this Act.
CHAPTER I
OF EASEMENTS
GENERALLY
4. ‘Easement’
defined. -An easement is a right which the owner or occupier
of certain land possesses, as such, for the beneficial enjoyment of that land,
to do and continue to do something, or to prevent and continue to prevent
something being done, in or upon, or in respect of certain other land not his
own,
Dominant and servient heritages and owners.--The land for the beneficial enjoyment of
which the right exists is called the dominant heritage, and the owner or
occupier thereof the dominant owner; the land on which the liability is imposed
is called the
servient heritage, and the owner or occupier thereof the servient owner.
Explanation. -In the first and second clauses
of this section the, expression “land”
includes also things permanently attached to the earth; the expression
“beneficial enjoyment’ includes also possible convenience, remote advantage,
and even a there amenity; and the expression “to do something” includes removal
and appropriation by the dominant owner, for the beneficial enjoyment of the
dominant heritage, or any part of the soil of the servant heritage, or anything
growing or subsisting thereon.
Illustrations
(a) A, as the owner of a certain house, has a right of way thither over his neighbour B’s land for purposes connected with the beneficial enjoyment of the house. This is an easement.
(b) A, as the owner of a certain house, has
the right to go on his neighbour B’s land and to take water for the purposes of
his household, out of a spring therein.
This is an easement.
(c) A, as the owner of a certain house, has the right to conduct water from B’s stream to supply the fountain in the garden attached to the house. This is an easement.
(d) A, as the owner of a certain house and
farm, has the right to graze a certain number of his own cattle on B’s field,
or to take, for the purpose of being used in the house, by himself. his family,
guests, lodgers and servants, water or fish out of C’s tank, or timber out of D’s wood. or to use,
for the purpose of manuring his land, the leaves which have fallen from the
trees in E’s land. These are casements.
(e) A dedicates to the public the right to
occupy the surface of certain land for the purpose of passing and re-passing. This right is not an easement.
(f) A is bound to cleanse a watercourse running through his land and kept it free from obstruction for the benefit of B, a lower riparian owner. This is not easement.
5. Continuous and discontinuous, apparent and
non-apparent easements. - Easements are either
continuous or discontinuous, apparent or non-apparent.
A continuous easement is one
whose enjoyment is or may be continual without the act of man.
A
discontinuous easement is one that needs the act of man for its enjoyment.
An apparent easement is one
the existence of which is shown by some permanent sign, which, upon careful
inspector by a competent person,
would be visible to him.
A non-apparent easement is
one that has no such sign.
Illustrations
(a) A right annexed to B’s house to receive
light by the window without obstruction by his neighbour A. This is a
continuous easement.
(b) A right of way annexed to A’s house over B’s
land. This is a discontinuous easement.
(c) Rights annexed to A’s land to lead water
thither across B’s land by an
aqueduct and to draw off water thence by a drain. The drain would be discovered upon careful inspection by a person
conversant with such matter These are
apparent easements.
(d) A right annexed to A’s house to prevent B
from building oil his own land. This is
a non-apparent easement.
6. Easement for
limited time or on condition. -An easement may be permanent, or for a
term of years or other limited period, or subject to periodical interruption,
or exercisable only at a certain place, or at certain times, or between certain
hours, or for a particular purpose, or on condition that it shall commerce or
become void or voidable on the happening of a specified event or the
performance or nonperformance of a specified Act.
7. Easement
restrictive of certain rights. -Easement are restrictions of one or other of the
following rights (namely):
(a) Exclusive
right to enjoy-The exclusive right of every owner of immovable property
(subject to any law for the time being in force) to enjoy and dispose of the
same and all products thereof and accessions thereto.
(b) Rights
to advantages arising from situation. -The right of every
owner of immovable property (subject to any law for the time being in force) to
enjoy without disturbance by another the natural advantages arising from its
situation.
Illustrations of
the Rights above referred to
(a) The exclusive right of every owner of land
in a town to build on such land, subject to any municipal law for the time
being in force.
(b) The right of every owner of land that the air passing thereto shall not be unreasonably polluted by other persons.
(c) The right of every owner of a house that
his physical comfort shall not be interfered with materially and unreasonable
by noise or vibration caused by any other person.
(d) The right of every owner of land to so
much light and air as pass vertically thereto.
(e) The right of every owner of land that such land, in its natural conditions, shall have the support naturally rendered by the subjacent and adjacent soil of another person.
Explanation. -Land is in its natural
condition when it is not excavated and not subjected to artificial pressure;
and the “subjacent and adjacent soil” mentioned in this illustration means such
soil only as in its natural condition would support the dominant heritage in
its natural condition.
(f) The right of every owner of land that, within his own limits the water which naturally passes or percolates by, over or through his land shall not before so passing or percolating, be unreasonably polluted by other persons.
(g) The right of every owner of land to
collect and dispose within his own limits of all water under the land which
does not pass in a defined channel and all water on its surface which does not pass in a defined channel.
(h) The right of every owner of land that the
water of every natural stream which passes by through or over his land in a
defined natural channel shall be allowed by other persons to flow within such
owner’s limits without interruption and without material attention in quantity, direction. force or
temperature; the right of every owner of land abutting on a natural lake or
pond into or out of which a natural stream flows, that the water of such lake
or pond shall be allowed by other persons to remain within such owner’s limits
without material alteration in quantity or temperature.
(i) The right of every owner of upper land
that water naturally rising in, or falling on such land, and not passing in
defined channels, shall be allowed by the owner of adjacent lower land to run
naturally thereto.
(j) The right of every owner of land abutting
on a natural stream, lake or pond to use and consume its water for drinking,
household purpose and watering his cattle and sheep: and tire right of every
such owner to use and consume the water for irrigating such land, and for the
purposes of any manufactory situate thereon, provided that he does not thereby
cause material injury to other like owners.
Explanation. -A natural stream -is a
stream, whether permanent or intermittent, tide or tideless, on the surface of
land or underground, which flows by the operation of nature only and in a
natural and known course.
CHAPTER II
THE IMPOSITION, ACQUISITION AND TRANSFER OF EASEMENTS
8. Who may impose easement. -And easement may be imposed
by any one in the circumstances, and to the extent, in and to which he may
transfer his interest in the heritage on which the liability is to imposed.
Illustrations
(a) A is tenant of B’s land under a lease for air unexpired term of twenty years, and has power to transfer his interest under the lease. A may impose an easement on the land to continue during the time that the lease exists or for any shorter period.
(b) A is tenant for his life to certain land
with remainder to B absolutely, A cannot unless with B’s consent, impose an
easement thereon which will continue after the determination of his life
interest.
(c) A, B and C are co-owners of certain land. A cannot, without the consent of B and C, impose an easement on the land or on any part thereof.
(d) A and B are lessees of the same lessor, A
of a field X for a term of five years and B of field Y for a term of ten
years. A’s interest under his lease is
transferable; B’s is not. A may impose
on X, in favour of B, a right of way terminable with A’s lease.
9. Servient owners. -Subject to the provisions of
Section 8, a servient owner may impose on the servient heritage any easement
that does not lessen the utility of the existing easement. But he cannot, without the consent of the
dominant owner, impose an easement on the servient heritage which would lessen
such utility.
Illustrations
(a) A has, in respect of his mill, a right to the uninterrupted flow thereto, from sunrise to noon, of the water of B’s stream. B may grant to C the right to divert the water of the stream from noon to sunsets, provided that A’s supply is not thereby diminished.
(b) A has, in respect of his house, a right of way over B’s land. B may grant to C as the owner of a neighboring farm, the right to feed his Cattle on the grass growing on the way provided that A’s right of way is not thereby obstructed.
10. Lessor and mortgagor. -Subject to the provisions of
Section 8, a lessor may impose, on the
property leased, any easement that does not derogate from the rights of the
lessee as such, and a mortgagor may impose, on the property mortgaged, any
easement that does not render the security insufficient. But a lessor or mortgagor cannot, without
the consent of the lessee or mortgages, impose any other easement and such property,
unless it be to take effect on the termination of the lease or the redemption
of the mortgage.
Explanation. -A security is insufficient
within the meaning of this section unless the value of the mortgaged property
exceeds by one-third, or, if consisting of building exceeds by one-half, the
amount for the time being due on the mortgage.
11. Lessee. -No lessee or other person having a derivative
interest may impose on the property held by him as such an easement to take
effect after the expiration of’ his own interest, or in derogation of the right
of the right of the lessor or the superior proprietor,
12. Who may
acquire easements.-An easement may be
acquired by the owner of the immovable property for the beneficial enjoyment of
which the right is created, or on his behalf, by any person in possession of
the same.
One of two or more co-owners
of immovable property may, as such, with or without the consent of the other or
others, acquire an easement for the beneficial enjoyment of such property.
No lessee of immovable property
can acquire, for the beneficial enjoyment of other immovable property of his
own, an easement in or the property
comprised in his lease.
13. Easements of necessity and quasi-easements. -Where one person transfers
or bequeaths immovable property to another-
(a) If an easement in other immovable property
of the transferor or testator is necessary for enjoying the subject of the
transfer or bequest, the transferee or legatee shall be entitled to such
easement; or
(b) If such an easement is apparent and
continuous and necessary for enjoying: the said subject as it was enjoyed when
the transfer or bequest took effect, the transferee or lessee shall, unless a
different intention is expressed or necessarily implied, be entitled to such
easement:
(c) If an easement in the subject of the
transfer or bequest is necessary for enjoying other immovable property of the
transferor or testator, the transferor or the legal representative of the
testator shall be entitled to such easement; or
(d) If such an easement is apparent and
continuous and necessary for enjoying the said property as it was enjoyed when
the transfer or bequest took effect, the transferor, or the legal
representative of the testator, shall, unless a different intention is
expressed or necessarily implied be entitled to such easement.
Where a partition is made of
the joint property of several persons, -
(e) If an easement over the share of one of
them is necessary for enjoying the share of another of them, the latter shall
be entire to such easement, or
(f) If such an easement is apparent and
continuous and necessary for enjoying the share of the latter as it was enjoyed
when the partition took effect, he shall, unless the different intention is
expressed or necessary implied, be entitled to such easement.
The easements mentioned in
this section, clauses (a), (c) and (e), are called easement of necessity.
Where immovable property
passed by operation of law, the persons from and to whom it so passes are, for
the purpose of this section, to be deemed respectively, the transferor and
transferee.
Illustrations
(a) A sells B a field then used for
agricultural purposes only. it is inaccessible except by passing over A’s
adjoining land or by trespassing on the land of a stranger. B is entitled to a right of way, for
agricultural purposes only, over A’s adjoining land to the field sold.
(b) A, the owner of two fields, sells one to B, and retains the other. The field retained was, at the date of the sale, used for agricultural purposes only, and is inaccessible except by passing over the field sole to B. A is entitled to a right of way, for agricultural purposes only, over B’s field to the field retained.
(c) A sells B a house with windows overlooking
A ‘s land which A retains. The right
which passes over A’s land to the windows is necessary for enjoying the house
as it was enjoyed when the sale took effect.
B is entitled to the light, and A cannot afterwards obstruct it by
building on his land.
(d) A sells B a house with windows overlooking
A’s land. The right passing over A’s
land to the windows is necessary for enjoying the house as it was enjoyed when
the sale took effect. Afterwards A
sells the land to C. Here C cannot obstruct the light by building on the land
for takes it subject to the burdens to which it was subject in A’s hands.
(e) A is the owner of a house and adjoining
land. The house has windows overlooking the land. A simultaneously sells the house to B and the land to C. The
light passing over the land is necessary for enjoying the house as it was
enjoyed when the sale took effect. Here
A impliedly grants B a right to the light, aid C takes the land subject to the
restriction that he may not build so as to obstruct such right.
(f) A is the owner of a house and adjoining land. The house has windows overlooking the land. A, retaining the house sells the land to B, without expressly reserving any easement. The light passing over the land is necessary for enjoying the house as it was enjoyed when the sale took effect. A is entitled to the light and B cannot build on the land so as to obstruct such light.
(g) A, the owner of a house, sells B a factory
built on adjoining land. B is entitled,
as against A, to pollute the air, when necessary, with smoke and vapours from
the factory,
(h) A, the owner of two adjoining houses, Y and 4 sells Y to B, and retains Z. B is entitled to the benefit of all gutters and drains common to the two houses and necessary for enjoying Y as it was enjoyed when the sale took effect, and A is entitled to the benefit of all the gutters and drains common to the two houses and necessary for enjoying Z as it was enjoyed when the sale took effect.
(i) A, the owner of two adjoining building,
sells one to B, retaining the other. B
is entitled to 4 right to lateral support from A’s building, and A is entitled
to a right to lateral support from in B’s building.
(j) A, the owner of two adjoining building, sells one to B, and the other to C. C is entitled to lateral support from B’s building, and B is entitled to lateral support from C’s building.
(k) A grants lands to B for the purpose of
building a house thereon. B is entitled
to such amount of lateral and subjacent support from A’s land as is necessary
for the safety of the house.
(1) Under the Land Acquisition Act, 1870, a
Railway Company compulsorily acquires a portion of B’s land for the purpose of
making a siding. The Company is
entitled to such amount of lateral support from B’s adjoining land as is essential
for the safety of the siding.
(m) Owing to the partition of joint property, A
becomes the owner of an upper room in a building, and B becomes the owner of
the portion of the building immediately beneath it. A is entitled to such amount of vertical support from B’s portion
as- is essential for the safety of the upper room.
(n) A lets a house and grounds to B for a particular business. B has no access in them other than by crossing A’s land. B is entitled to a right of way over that land suitable to the business to be carried on by B in the house and grounds.
14. Direction of
way of necessity-When a right to a way of necessity is created under
Section 13, the transferor, the legal representative of the testator, or the
owner of the share over which the right is exercised, as the case may be, is
entitled to set out the way but it must be reasonably convenient for the
dominant owner.
When the person so entitled
to set out the way refuses or neglects to do so, the dominant owner may set it
out.
15. Acquisition
by prescription. -Where the access and use of light
or air and for any building have been peaceably enjoyed therewith, as an
easement, without interruption, and for twenty years.
And where support from one
person’s land or things affixed thereto, has been peaceably, received by
another person’s land subjected to artificial pressure, or by things affixed
thereto, as an easement, without interruption, and for twenty years,
And where a right of way or
any other easement has been peaceably and openly enjoyed by any person claiming
title thereto, as an easement and as
of right, without interruption, and for twenty years,
The right, to such access
and use of light or air, support, or other easement, shall be absolute.
Each of the said periods of
twenty years shall be taken to be a period ending within two years next before
the institution of the suit wherein the claim to which such period relates is
contested.
Explanation I-Nothing is an enjoyment
within the meaning of this section when it has been had in pursuance of an
agreement with the owner or occupier of the property over which the right is
claimed, and it is apparent from the agreement that such right has not been
granted as an easement, or, if granted as an easement, that it has been granted
for a limited period, or subject to a condition on the fulfilment of which it
is to cease.
Explanation II. -Nothing is an interruption
within the meaning of this section unless where there is an actual cessation of
the enjoyment by reason of an obstruction by the act of some other than the
claimant, and unless such obstruction is submitted to or acquiesced in for one
year after the claimant has notice thereof, and of the person making or
authorizing the same to be made:
Explanation III. -Suspensions of enjoyment in
pursuance of a contract between the dominant and servient owners is not an
interruption within the meaning of the section.
Explanation IV. -In the case of an easement
to pollute water the said period twenty years begins when the pollution first
prejudices perceptibly the servient heritage.
When the property over which
a right is claimed Under this section belongs to Government, this section shall
be read as if for the words “twenty years” the words “thirty years” were
substituted.
Illustrations
(a) A suit is brought in 1883 for obstructing
a right of way. The defendant admits
the abduction but denies the right of way.
The plaintiff proves that the right was peaceably and openly enjoyed
by him, claiming title thereto, as an easement, and as of right, without
interruption, from Ist January, 1862, to 1st January, 1882. The plaintiff is entitled to judgment.
(b) In a like suit the plaintiff shows that the right was peaceably and openly enjoyed by him for twenty years. The defendant proves that for a year of that time the plaintiff was entitled to possession of the servient heritage as lessee thereof and enjoyed the right as such lessee. The suit shall be dismissed, for the right of way has not been enjoyed “as an easement” for twenty years.
(c) In a like suit the plaintiff shows that the right was peaceably and openly enjoyed by him for twenty years. The defendant proves that the plaintiff on one occasion during the twenty years had admitted that the user was not of right and asked his leave to enjoy the right. The suit shall be dismissed, for the right of way has not been enjoyed “as of right” for twenty years.
16. Exclusion in favour of reversioner of servient heritage. -Provided
that, when any land upon, over or from which any easement has been enjoyed or
derived has been held under or by virtue of any interest for life or any term of years
exceeding three years from the granting thereof, the time of the enjoyment of
such easement during the continuance of such interest or term shall be excluded
in the computation of the said last-mentioned period of twenty years in case
the claim is, within three years next after the determination of such, interest
or term, resisted by the person entitled, on such determination, to the said land.
Illustration
(a) A sues for a declaration that he is
entitled to a right of way over B’s land, A proves that he has enjoyed the right for twenty-five years. But B shows that during ten of these years C
had a life-interest in the land; that one’s death B became entitled to the
land; and that within two years after C’s death lie contested A’s claim to the
right. The suit must be dismissed, as
A, with reference to the provisions of this section, has only proved enjoyment
for fifteen years.
17. Rights which cannot be acquired by prescription.
-Easements
acquired under Section 15 are said to be acquired by prescription, and are
called prescriptive rights.
None of the following rights ca ‘ n be so acquired-
(a) A right which would tend to the total
destruction of the subject of the right, or the property on which, if the
acquisition were made, liability would be imposed;
(b) A right to the free passage of light or air to an open space of ground;
(c) A right to surface-water not flowing in a
stream and not permanently collected in a
pool, tank or otherwise;
(d) A right to underground water not passing in a defined channel.
18. Customary
easements. -An easement may be acquired in virtue of a local
custom. Such easements are called
customary easements.
Illustrations
(a) By the custom of a
certain village every cultivator of village land is entitled, as such, to graze
his cattle on the common pasture. A
having become the tenant of a plot of uncultivated land in the village breaks
up and cultivates that plot he thereby acquires an easement to graze his cattle
in accordance with the custom.
(b) By the custom of a
certain town no owner or occupier of a house can open a new window therein so
as substantially to invade his neighbor’s privacy. A builds a house in the town near B’s house. A thereupon acquires an easement that B
shall not open new windows in his house so as to command a view of the portions
of A’s house which are ordinarily excluded from observation, and B requires a
like easement with respect to A’s house.
19. Transfer of
dominant heritage passes easement. -Where the dominant heritage is transferred or
devolves, by act of parties or by operation of law, the transfer or revolution
shall, unless a contrary intention appears, be deemed to pass the easement to
the person in whose favour the transfer or devolution takes place.
Illustration
A has certain land to which
a right of way is annexed. A lets the
land to B for twenty years. The right
of way vests in B and his legal representatives so long as the lease continues.
CHAPTER III
THE INCIDENTS OF
EASEMENTS
20. Rules controlled by contract or title. -The rules contained in this
Chapter are controlled by any contract between the dominant and servient owners
relating to the servient heritage, and by the provisions of the instrument or
decree, if any, by which the easement referred to was imposed.
Incidents of customary easements. -And when any incident of any customary easement is
inconsistent with such rules, nothing in this Chapter shall affect such incident.
21. Bar to use unconnected with enjoyment. -An easement
must not be used for any purpose not connected with the enjoyment of the
dominant heritage.
Illustrations
(a) A, as owner of a farm Y, has right of way
over B’s land to Y. Lying beyond Y, A has another farm 4 the beneficial
enjoyment of which is not necessary for the beneficial enjoyment of Y. He must
not use the easement for the purpose of passing to and from Z.
(b) A, as owner of a certain house, has a right of way to and from it. For the purpose of passing to and from the house, the right may be used, not only by A, but by the members of his family, his guests, lodgers, servants, workmen, visitors and customers: for this is a purpose, connected with the enjoyment of the dominant heritage. So, if A lets the house, he may use the right of way for the purpose of collecting the rent and seeing the house is kept in repair.
22. Exercise of easement: confinement of exercise of
easement. -The dominant owner must exercise -his right in the mode which is least
onerous to the servient owner; and, when the exercise of an easement can
without detriment to the dominant owner be, confined to a determinate part of
the servient heritage, such exercise shall, at the request of the servient
owner be so confined.
Illustrations
(a) A has a right of way over B’s field, A must enter the way at either end and not at any intermediate point.
(b) A has a right annexed to his house to cut thatching grass in B’s swamp. A when exercising his easement must cut the grass so that the plants may not be destroyed.
23. Right to
alter made of enjoyment. -Subject to the provisions of Section 22, the
dominant owner may, from time to time, alter the mode and place of enjoying the
easement provided that he does not thereby impose any addition burden on the
servient heritage.
Exception. -The dominant owner of a
right of way cannot vary his line of passage at pleasure, even though he does
not thereby impose any additional burden on the servient heritage.
Illustrations
(a) A, the owner of a sawmill, has a right to a flow of water sufficient to work the mill. He may convert the sawmill into a corn-mill; provided that it can be worked by the same amount of water.
(b) A has a right to discharge in B’s land the rain-water from the eaves of A’s house. This does not entitle A to advance his eaves if, by so doing, he imposes a greater burden on B’s land.
(c) A as the owner of a paper-mill, acquires a
right to Pollute a stream in the refuse-liquor Produced by making in the mill
paper from rags. He may pollute the stream by pouring similar liquor produced
by making in the mill paper by a new process from bamboss. Provided that he
does not substantially increase the amount, or injuriously change of the
pollution.
(d) A,
a riparian owner, acquires as against the lower riparian owners, a prescriptive
right to pollute a stream by throwing sawdust into it. This does not entitle A to pollute by
discharging into it poisonous liquor.
24. Right to do acts to secure enjoyment. -The dominant owner is
entitled, its against the servient owner, to do all acts necessary to secure
the full enjoyment of the easement; but such acts must be done at such time and
in such manner as, without detriment to the dominant owner, to cause the
servient owner as little inconvenience as possible; and the dominant owner must
repair, as far practicable, the damage (if any) caused by the act to the
servient heritage.
Accessory rights. -Rights to do acts necessary
to secure the full enjoy easement are called accessory right.
Illustrations
(a) A has air easement to lay
pipes in B’s land to convey water to A’s cistern. A may enter a dig tire land in order to mend tire pipes, but he
must restore the surface to its original state.
(b) A has an easement of a drain through 13’s land. The sewer with which the drain communicates is altered. A may enter upon B’s land and alter the drain, to adapt it to the new sewer, provided that he does not thereby impose any additional burden on B’s land,
(c) A, as owner of a certain
house, has a right of way over B’s land.
The way is out of repair or a tree is blown down and falls across
it. A may enter on B’s land and repair
the way or remove the tree from it.
(d) A, as owner of a certain field, has a right of way over B’s land. B renders the way impassable. A may deviate from the way and pass over the adjoining land of B provided that the deviation is reasonable.
(e) A, as owner of a certain house, has a right or way over B’s field. A may remove rocks to make the way.
(f) A has an easement of support from B’s well. The wall gives way. A may enter upon B’s land and repair the wall,
(g) A has an easement to have his land flooded by means of a dam in B’s stream. The dam is half swept by an inundation. A may enter upon B’s land and repair the dam.
25. Liability for expenses
necessary for preservation of easement-The expenses incurred in constructing works,
or making repairs, or doing any other act necessary for the use or preservation
of an easement, must be defrayed by the dominant owner.
26. Liability for damage for want
of repair. -Where an easement is enjoyed by means of an artificial work, the
dominant owner is liable to make compensation of any damage to the servient
heritage arising from the want of repair of such work.
27. Servient owner not bound to do
anything. -The servient owner is not bound to do anything for the benefit of the
dominant heritage, and he is entitled, as against the dominant owner, to use
the servient heritage in any way consistent with the enjoyment of the easement;
but he must not do any act tending to restrict the easement or to render its
exercise less convenient.
Illustrations
(a) A, as owner of a house, has a fight to lead water and send sewage through B’s land. B is not bound, as servient owner, to clear the watercourse or scour tire sewer.
(b) A grants a right of way through his land to B as owner of a field. A may feed his cattle on grass growing on the way, provided that B’s right of way is not thereby obstructed; but lie must not build a wall at the end of his land so as to prevent B from going beyond it, nor must he narrow the way so as to render the exercise of the right less easy than it was at the date of the grant.
(c) A, in respect of his house, is entitled to an easement of support from B’s wall. B is not bound, as servient owner to keep the wall standing and in repair. But he must not pull down or weaken the wall so as to make it incapable of rendering the necessary support.
(d) A, in respect of his mill, is entitled to
a watercourse through B’s land. A must
not drive stakes so as to obstruct the watercourse.
(e) A, in respect of his house, is entitled to
a certain quantity of light passing over B’s land. B must not plant trees so as
to obstruct the passage to A’s windows of that quantity of light.
28. Extent of easements-With respect to the extent
of easements and the mode of their enjoyment, the following provisions shall
take effect:
Easement
of necessity-An
easement of necessity is co-extensive with the necessity, as it existed when
the easement was imposed.
Other
easements-The
extent of any other easement and the mode of its enjoyment must be fixed with
reference to the probable intention of the parties, and the purpose for which
the right was imposed or acquired.
In the absence of evidence
as to such intention and purpose:
(a) Right
of way-A right of way of any one kind does not include a right of way of
any other kind;
(b) Right
of light or air acquired by grant. -The extent of a right to the passage of
light or air to a certain window, door on other opening, imposed by a
testamentary or non-testamentary instrument, is the quantity of light or air
that entered the opening at the time the testator died or the non-testamentary
instrument was made;
(c) Prescriptive
right to light or air-The extent
of a prescriptive right to the passage of light or air to a certain window,
door or other opening is that quantity of light or air which has been
accustomed to enter that opening during the whole of the perceptive period
irrespectively of the purposes for which it has been used;
(d) Prescriptive
right to pollute air or water-The extent of a prescriptive right to
pollute air or water is the extent of the pollution at the commencement of the period
of user on completion of which the right arose; and
(e) Other
Prescriptive rights-The extent of every other prescriptive right to pollute
air or water is the extent of the pollution at the commencement of the period
of user or completion of which the right arose; and
(f) Other
prescriptive rights-The extent of every other prescriptive
right and the mode of its enjoyment must be determined by the accustomed user
of the right.
29. Increase of
easement-The dominant owner cannot, by merely altering or adding to the
dominant heritage, substantially increase an easement.
Where an easement has been
granted or bequeathed so that its extent shall be proportionate to the extent
of the dominant heritage, if the dominant heritage is increased by alluvion,
the easement is proportionately increased, and if the dominant heritage is
diminished by diluvion, the easement is proportionately diminished.
Save as aforesaid, no
easement is effected by any change in the extent of the dominant or the
servient heritage.
Illustrations
(a) A, the owner of a mill, has acquired a
prescriptive right, to divert to his mill part of the water of a stream. A alters the machinery of his mill. He cannot thereby increase his right to
divert water.
(b) A has acquired an easement to pollute a stream by carrying on a manufacture on its banks by which a certain quantity of foul matter is discharged into it. A extends his works and thereby increases the quantity discharged. He is responsible to the lower riparian owners for injury done by such increase.
(c) A as the owner of a farm, has a right to
take for the purpose of manuring his farm; leaves which have fallen from the
trees on B’s land. A buys a field and
unites it to his farm. A is not thereby
entitled to take leaves to manure this fields.
30. Partition of dominant heritage-Where a dominant heritage is
divided between two or more persons, the easement becomes annexed to each of
the shares, but not so as to increase substantially the burden on the servient
heritage: provided that such annexation is consistent with the terms of the
instrument, decree or revenue proceeding (if any) under which the division was
made, and in the case of prescriptive rights, with the user during the
prescriptive period.
Illustrations
(a) A house to which a right of way by a particular path is annexed is divided into two parts, one of which is granted to A, the other to B. Each is entitled, in respect of his part, to a right of way by the same path.
(b) A house to which is
annexed the right of drawing water from a well to the extend of fifty buckets a
days is divided into two distinct heritages, one of which is granted to A, the
other to B, A and B are each entitled, in respect of his heritage, to draw from
the well fifty buckets a day but the amount drawn by both must not exceed fifty
buckets a day.
(c) A, having in respect of his house an easement of light, divides the house into three district heritages. Each of these continues the have to right to have its windows unobstructed.
31. Obstruction in case of
excessive user. -In the case of excessive user
of an easement the servient owner may, without prejudice to any other remedies
to which he may be entitled, obstruct the user but only on the servient
heritage: provided that such user cannot be obstructed when the obstruction
would interfere with the lawful enjoyment of the easement.
Illustrations
A, having a right to the
free passage over B’s land of light to four windows, 6’x 4’, increases their
size and number. It is impossible to
obstruct the passage of light to the new windows without also obstructing the
passage of light to the ancient windows.
B cannot obstruct the excessive user.
CHAPTER
IV
THE
DISTURBANCE OF EASEMENTS
32. Right to enjoyment without disturbance. -The owner or occupier of the
dominant heritage is entitled to enjoy the easement without disturbance by any
other person.
Illustration
A, as owner of a house, has
a right of way over B’s land. C
unlawfully enters on B’s land and obstructs A in his right of way. A may use C for compensation, not for the
entry, but for the obstruction.
33. Suit for disturbance of
easement. -The owner of any interest in the dominant heritage, or the occupier of
such heritage, may institute a suit for compensation for the disturbance of the
easement or of any right accessory thereto: provided that the disturbance has
actually caused substantial damage to the plaintiff.
Explanation I-The doing of any act likely
to injure the plaintiff by affecting the evidence of the easement, or by
materially diminishing the value of the dominant heritage, is substantial
damage within the meaning of this section and Section 34.
Explanation II. -Where the easement disturbed
is a right to the free passage of light passing to the openings in a house, no
damage is substantial within the meaning of this section unless it falls within
the first Explanation, or interferes materially with the physical comfort of the
plaintiff, or prevents him from carrying on his accustomed business in the dominant heritage as
beneficially as he had done previous to instituting the suit,
Explanation III. -Where the easement disturbed
is a right to the free passage of light to the openings in a house, damage is
substantial within the meaning of this section if it interferes materially with
the physical comfort of the plaintiff, though it is not injurious to his
health.
Illustrations
(a) A places a permanent obstruction in a path
over which B, as tenant of C’s house, has a right of way. This is substantial damage to C, for it may
affect the evidence of his reversionary right to the easement.
(b) A, as owner of a house, has a right to
walk along one side of B’s house. B
builds a verandah overhanging the way about ten feet from the ground and so as
not to occasion any inconvenience to
foot passengers using the way. This is
not substantial damage to A.
34. When cause
of action arises for removal of support. -The removal of the means of
support to which a dominant owner is entitled does not give rise lo a right to
recover compensation unless and until substantial damage is actually sustained.
35. Injunction to
restrain disturbance.
-Subject to the
provisions the Specific Relief Act, 1877, Sections 52 to 57 (both inclusive),
an injunction may be granted to restrain the disturbance of an easement. -
(a) If the easement is actually disturbed-then
compensation for such disturbance might be recovered under this Chapter.
(b) If the disturbance is only threatened or
intended. -When the act threatened or intended must necessarily, if performed,
disturbed the easement.
36. Abatement of
obstruction of easement. -Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 24, the
dominant owner cannot himself abate a wrongful obstruction of an easement.
CHAPTER V
EXTINCTION,
SUSPENSION AND REVIVAL OF EASEMENT
37. Extinction by
dissolution of right of servient owner. -When,
from a cause which preceded the imposition of an easement, the person by whom
it was imposed ceases to have any right in the servient heritage, the easement
is extinguished.
Exception-Nothing in this section
applies to an easement lawfully imposed by a mortgagor in accordance with
Section 10.
Illustrations
(a) A transfers Sultanpur to B on condition
that he does not marry C, B impress an easement on Sultanpur. Then B marries C, B’s interest in Sultanpur
ends, and with it the easement is
extinguished.
(b) A, in 1860, let Sultanpur to B for thirty
years from the date of the lease. B, it
1861, 4nposes an easement on the land in favour of C, who enjoys the easement
peaceably and openly an easement without interruption for twenty-nine years, B’s
interest in Sultanpur then ends, and with it C’s easement.
(c) A and B, tenants of C, have permanent
transferable interest in their
respective holdings. A imposes on his
holding an easement to draw water from a tank for the purpose of irrigating B’s
laid. B enjoys the easement for twenty
years. Then A’s rent falls into arrear
and his interest is sold B’s easement is extinguished.
(d) A mortgages Sultanpur to B. and lawfully imposes an easement on the land in favour of C in accordance with the provisions of Section 10. The land is sold to D in satisfaction of the mortgage-debt. The easement is not thereby extinguished.
38. Extinction by release. -An easement is extinguished
when the dominant owner releases it, expressly or impliedly, to the servient
owner.
Such release can be made
only in the circumstances and to the extent in and to which the dominant owner
can alienate the dominant heritage.
An easement may be released
as to part only of the servient heritage.
Explanation I-An easement is impliedly
released:
(a) Where the dominant owner expressly
authorises an act of a permanent nature to be done on the servient heritage,
the necessary consequence of which is to prevent his future enjoyment of the
easement, and such act is done in pursuance of such authority;
(b) Where any permanent alteration is made in
the dominant heritage of such a nature as to show that the dominant owner
intended to cease to enjoy the easement in future.
Explanation II. -Mere nonuser of an easement
is not an implied release within the meaning of this section.
Illustrations
(a) A, B and C are co-owners of a house to
which an easement is annexed. A.
Without the consent of B and C releases the easement. This release is effectual only all against A and his legal
representative.
(b) A grants B an easement over A’s land for
the beneficial enjoyment of his house.
B assigned the house to C, B then purports to release the easement. The release is ineffectual.
(c) A, having the right to discharge his eavesdroppings into B’s yard, expressly authorises B to build over this year to a height which will Interfere with the discharge. B builds according A’s easement is extinguished to the extent of the interference.
(d) A, having an easement of light to a
window, builds up that window with bricks and mortar so as to manifest an
intention to abandon the easement permanently.
The easement is impliedly in released.
(e) A, having a projecting roof by means of which fie enjoys an easement to discharge eavesdropping on B’s land permanently alters and roof so as to direct the rain-water into a different channel and discharge it on C’s land. The easement is impliedly released.
39. Extinction by revocation. -An easement is extinguished
when the servient owner, in exercise of power reserved in this behalf, revokes
the easement.
40. Extinction on expiration of limited period or
happening of dissolving condition. -An easement is extinguished where it has been
imposed for a limited period, or acquired on condition that it shall become
void on the performance or non-performance of a specified act, and the period
expires or the condition is fulfilled.
41. Extinction on termination of necessity. -An easement of necessity is
extinguished when the necessity comes to an end.
Illustrations
(a) A grant B a field inaccessible except by passing over A’s adjoining land, B afterwards purchases a part of that land over which he can pass to his field. The right of way over A’s land which B has acquired is extinguished.
42. Extinction of useless easement-An easement is extinguished
when it becomes incapable of being at any time and under any circumstances
beneficial to the dominant owner.
43. Extinction by permanent change in dominant
heritage. -Where by, any permanent change in the dominant heritage, the burden on
the servient heritage is materially increased and cannot be reduced by the
servient owner without interfering with the lawful enjoyment of the easement,
the easement is extinguished unless-
(a) It was intended for the beneficial
enjoyment of the dominant heritage, to whatever extent the easement should be
used; or
(b) The injury caused to the servient owner by
the change is so slight that no reasonable person would complain of it; or
(c) The
easement is an easement of necessity.
Nothing in this section shall
be deemed to apply to in easement entitling the dominant owner to support of
the dominant heritage.
44. Extinction on
permanent alteration of servient heritage by superior force. -An easement is extinguished
where the servient heritage is by superior force so permanently altered that
dominant owner call no longer enjoy such easement:
Provided that, where a way
of necessity is destroyed by superior force, the dominant owner has a right to
another way over the servient heritage; and the provisions of Section 14 apply
to such way.
Illustrations
(a) A grants to B, as the owner of a certain house, a right to fish in a river running through ‘s land. The river changes its course permanently and runs through C’s land. B’s easement is extinguished.
(b) Access to a path over which A has a right
of way is permanently cut off by an earthquake.
A’s right is extinguished.
45. Extinction by
destruction of either heritage. -An easement
is extinguished when either the dominant or the servient heritage is completely
destroyed.
Illustration
A has a right of way over a
road running along the foot of a
sea-cliff. The road is washed away by a
permanent encroachment of the sea. A’s
easement is extinguished.
46. Extinction by
unity of ownership. -An easement is extinguished
when the same person becomes entitled to the absolute ownership of the whole of
the dominant and servient heritages.
Illustrations
(a) A, as the owner of a house, has a right of way over B’s field. A mortgages his house, and B mortgages his field to C. Then C forecloses both mortgages and becomes thereby absolute owner of both house and field. The right of way is extinguished.
(b) The dominant owner acquires only part of
the servient heritage: the easement is not extinguished, except in the ease
illustrated in Section 41.
(c) The servient owner acquires the dominant heritage in connexion
with a person; the easement is not
extinguished.
(d) The separate owners of two separate
dominant heritages jointly acquire the heritage which is servient to the two
separate heritages; the easements are not extinguished.
(e) The joint owners of the dominant heritage jointly acquire the servient heritage; the easement is extinguished.
(f) A single right of way exists over two
servient heritages for the beneficial
enjoyment of a single dominant heritage. The dominant owner acquires only one of the servient
heritages. The easement is not
extinguished.
(g) A has a right of way over B’s road. B dedicates the road to the public. A’s right of way is not extinguished.
47. Extinction
by non-enjoyment. -A continuous easement is
extinguished when it totally ceases to be enjoyed as such for an unbroken
period of’ twenty years.
A discontinuous easement is
extinguished when, for a like period, it has not been enjoyed as such.
Such period shall be
reckoned, in the case of a continuous easement, from the day on which its
enjoyment, was obstructed by the servient owner or rendered impossible by the
dominant owner; and, in the case of a discontinuous easement, from the day on
which it was last enjoyed by and person as dominant owner:
Provided that if, in the
case of a discontinuous easement the dominant owner, within such period,
registers, under the Indian Registration Act, III of 1877, a declaration of his
intention to retain such easement, it shall not be extinguished until a period
of twenty years has elapsed from the date of the registration.
Where an easement can be
legally enjoyed only at a certain place, or at certain times, or between
certain hours, or for a particular purpose, is enjoyment during the said period
at another place, or at other items, or between other hours, or for another
purpose, does not prevent is extinction under this section.
The circumstance that,
during the said period no one was it] possession of the servient heritage, or
that the easement could not be enjoyed or that a right accessory thereto was
enjoyed, or that dominant owner was not aware of its existence, or that he
enjoyed it in ignorance of his right to do so, does not prevent its extinction
under this section.
An easement is not
extinguished under this section-
(a) Where the cessation is in pursuance of
contract between the dominant and servient owners;
(b) Where the dominant heritage is held in
co-ownership, and one of the co-owners enjoys the easement within the said
period; or
(c) Where the easement is necessary easement.
Where several heritage are
respectively subject to rights of way for the benefit of a single heritage, and
the ways are continuous, such rights shall, for the purposes of this section,
be deemed to be a single easement.
Illustration
A has, an annexed to his
house, rights of way from the high road neither over the heritages X and Z and
the intervening heritage Y. Before the twenty years expire. A exercise his right of way over X. His
rights of way over Y and Z are not extinguished.
48. Extinction of
accessory right. -When an easement is extinguished, the right
(if any) accessory thereto are also extinguished.
Illustration
A has an easement to draw
water from B’s well. As accessory
thereto be has a right of way over B’s land to and from the well. The easement to draw water is extinguished
under Section 47. The right of way is also extinguished.
49. Suspension of
easement. -An easement is suspended when the dominant owner becomes entitled to
possession of the servient heritage for a limited interest therein or when the
servient owner becomes entitled to possession of the dominant heritage for a
limited interest therein.
50. Servient owner not entitled to require continuance.
-The
servient owner has not right to require that an easement be continued; and
notwithstanding the provisions of Section 26, he is not entitled to
compensation for damage caused to the servient heritage in consequence of the
extinguishment or suspension of the easement, if the dominant owner has given
to the servient owner such notice as will enable him, without unreasonable
expense, to protect the servient heritage from Such damage.
Compensation for damage caused by
extinguishment or suspension-When such
notice has not been given, the servient owner is entitled to compensation for
caused to the servient heritage in consequence of such extinguishment or
suspension.
Illustration
A, in exercise of an
easement, diverts to his canal the water of B’s stream. The diversion continues for many years, and
during that time the bed of’ the steam partly fills up. A then abandons his easement, and restores
the stream to its ancient court. B’s
land is consequently flooded. B sues A
for compensation for the damage caused by the flooding. It is proved that a gave B’s months’ notice
of his intention to abandon the easement, and that such notice was not
sufficient to enable B, without unreasonable expense, to have prevented the
damage. The suit must he dismissed.
51. Revival of easement. -An
easement
extinguished under Section 45 revives (ii) when the destroyed heritage is,
before twenty years have expired restored by the deposit of alluvion; (b) when
the destroyed heritage is a servant building and before twenty years have
expired such building is rebuilt upon the same site, and (c) when the destroyed
heritage is a dominate building and before twenty years have expired such
building is rebuilt upon the same site and in such a manner as not to impose a
greater burden on the servant heritage.
An easement extinguished
under Section 46 revives when the grant or bequest by which the unity of ownership
was produced is set aside by the decree of a competent Court. A necessary easement extinguished under the
same section revives when the unity of ownership ceases from any other cause.
A suspended easement revives
if the cause of Suspension is removed before the right is extinguished under
Section 47.
Illustration
A, as the absolute owner of
field Y, has right of way thither over B’s field A, A obtains from B a lease of
Z for twenty years. The easement is
suspended so long as A remains lessee (If Z. But when A assigns the lease to C,
or surrenders it to B, the right of way revive.
CHAPTER
VI
LICENCES
52. “Licence” defined. -Where one person grants to
another, or to a definite number if other persons, a right to do, or continue
to do, in or upon the immovable property of the grantor, something which would,
in the absence of such right, he unlawful, and such right does not amount to an
easement or an interest in the property, the right is called a licence.
53. Who may grant licence. -A licence
may he granted by any one in the circumstance and to the extend in and to which
he may transfer his interests in the property affected by the licence.
54. Grant may be express or implied. -The grant of a licence may
be express or implied from the conduct of the grantor, and an agreement which
purports to create an easement, but is ineffectual for that purpose, may
operate to create a licence.
55. Accessory licences annexed by
law. -All
licences necessary for the enjoyment of any interest, or the exercise of any
right, are implied in the constitution of’ such interest or right. Such licences ire called accessory licences.
Illustration
A sells the trees growing in
his land to B. B is entitled to go on the land and take away the trees.
56. Licence when
transferable. -Unless a different intention is expressed or necessarily implied, a
licence to attend a place of public entertainment may be transferred by the
licensee; but, save as aforesaid, a licence cannot be transferred by the
licensee or exercised by his servants or agents.
Illustrations
(a) A grants B a right to walk over A’s field
whenever he pleases. The right is not
annexed to any immovable property of B. The right cannot be transferred.
(b) The Government grants B a licence to erect and use temporary grain-sheds on Government land. In the absence of express provision to the contrary, B’s servants may enter on the land for the purpose of erecting sheds, erect the same, deposit grain therein and remove grain therefrom.
57. Grantor’s duty to disclose defects. -The grantor of a licence is
bound to disclose to the licensee any defect in the property affected by the licence, likely to he dangerous to
the person or property of the licence of which the grantor is, and the licensee
is not, aware.
59. Grantor’s
transfer not bound by licence. -When the grantor of the licence transfers the
property affected thereby, the transferee is not as such bound by the licence.
60. Licence when
revocable. -A licence may be revoked by grantor, unless-
(a) It is coupled with a transfer of property and such transfer is
in force.
(b) The licensee, acting upon the licence, has
executed a work of a permanent character are incurred expenses in the
execution.
61. Revocation
express or implied. -The revocation of a licence may be express or
implied.
Illustrations
(a) A, the owner of a field, grants a licence
to B, to use a path across it. A, with
intent to revoke the licence, locks a gate across the path. The licence is revoked.
(b) A, the owner of a field, grants a licence
to B to stack may on the field. A lets
or sells the field to C’. The licence
is revoked.
62. Licence when deemed revoked-A licence
is deemed to be revoked-
(a) When, from a cause preceding the grant of it, the grantor ceases
to have any interest in the property
affected by the licence;
(b) When the licensee releases it, expressly
or impliedly, to the grantor of his representative;
(c) Where it has been granted for a limited period,
or acquired on condition that it shall become void on the performance or
non-performance of a specified act, and the period expires, or the condition is
fulfilled;
(d) Where the property affected by the licence
is destroyed or by superior force so permanently altered that the licensee can
no longer exercise his right;
(e) Where the licensee becomes entitled to the
absolute ownership of the property affected by the licence;
(f) Where the licence is granted for a
specified purpose and the purpose is attained or abandoned, or becomes
impracticable;
(g) Where the licence is granted to the
licensee is holding a particular office, employment or character, and such
office, employment or character ceases to exist;
(h) Where the licence totally ceases to be
used as such for an unbroken period of twenty years, and such cessation is not
in pursuance of a contract between the grantor and the licensee;
(i) In the case of all accessory licence,
when the interest or right to which it is accessory to exist.
63. Licensee’s rights on revocation. -Where a licence is revoked,
the licensee is entitled to reasonable time to leave the property affected
thereby and to remove any goods which lie has been allowed to place on such
property.
64. Licensee’s rights on eviction. -Where a licence has been
granted for a consideration, and the licensee, without any fault of his own, is
evicted by the grantor before he has fully enjoyed, under the licence, the
right for which he contracted, he is entitled to recover compensation from the
grantors.