FACTS:
Over 50 years ago, Maria Florentino owned a house
and a camarin or warehouse in Vigan, Ilocos Sur. The house had and still has,
on the north side, three windows on the upper story, and a fourth one on the
ground floor. Through these windows the house receives light and air from the
lot where the camarin stands. On September 6, 1885, Maria Florentino made a
will, devising the house and the land on which it is situated to Gabriel
Florentino, one of the respondents herein, and to Jose Florentino, father of
the other respondents. In said will, the testatrix also devised the warehouse
and the lot where it is situated to Maria Encarnancion Florentino. Upon the
death of the testatrix in 1882, nothing was said or done by the devisees in
regard to the windows in question. On July 14, 1911, Maria Encarnacion
Florentino sold her lot and the warehouse thereon to the petitioner, Severo
Amor, the deed of sale stating that the vendor had inherited the property from
her aunt, Maria Florentino. In January, 1938, petitioner destroyed the old
warehouse and started to build instead a two-story house. On March 1st of that
year, respondents filed an action to prohibit petitioner herein from building
higher than the original structure and from executing any work which would shut
off the light and air that had for many years been received through the four
windows referred to.
ISSUE:
Whether or not an easement of light and view had
been established in favor of the property of the plaintiffs thereby prohibiting
Amor from constructing a building higher than the original structure.
DECISION:
An easement of light and view had been established in favour of the
property of the plaintiffs and Amor is bound by such easement. The Court held
that when the original owner, Maria Florentino, died in 1892, the ownership of
the house and its lot passed to respondents while the dominion over the camarin
and its lot was vested in Maria Encarnancion Florentino, from whom said
property was later bought by petitioner. At the time the devisees took
possession of their respective portions of the inheritance, neither the
respondents nor Maria Encarnacion Florentino said or did anything with respect
to the four windows of the respondents' house. The respondents did not renounce
the use of the windows, either by stipulation or by actually closing them
permanently. On the contrary, they exercised the right of receiving light and
air through those windows. Neither did the petitioner's predecessor in
interest, Maria Encarnacion Florentino, object to them or demand that they be
close. The easement was therefore created from the time of the death of the
original owner of both estates, so when petitioner bought the land and the
camarin thereon from Maria Encarnancion Florentino, the burden of this easement
continued on the real property so acquired because according to Article 534,
"easements are inseparable from the estate to which they actively or
passively pertain."
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