~We take judicial notice of the fact that the North Carolina Railroad is a great public highway, running from • Goldsboro to Charlotte through Rowan County. It belongs to a g"Mfit»si-public corporation chartered in 1849 by an act of the General Assembly that gives the corporation full power of eminent domain and provides that where land is not condemned for a right of way within a certain time, the corporation acquires 100 feet on each side of the center of the track. The road has been in actual operation since 1853. It was admitted upon the argument that the road is now being double tracked, and the injury set up in the .complaint is the construction of a “fill” upon a small part of the right of way upon which the additional track is laid. Plaintiffs claim that the boundaries of the deed take in some part of the right of way.
We are of opinion with his Honor- that the demurrer should be sustained.
*8Tbe railroad corporation bas not acquired tbe fee simple to tbe land covered by its right of way, but only an easement in it. If tbe railroad should be discontinued tbe land would revert to tbe owner of tbe fee. relieved of tbe burden of tbe easement, and tbe owner would then have an absolute title without encumbrance.
While this easement may be in one sense an encumbrance or burden upon tbe fee, it is in this particular case such an encumbrance as a purchaser bas knowledge of and is bound to take into consideration before purchasing. Tbe railroad right of way is a great public highway of which all persons must take notice, and as said by Kennedy, J., in Patterson v. Arthurs, 9 Watts Penn., 152: “It is fair to presume that every purchaser, before be closes bis contract for bis purchase of land, bas seen it and made himself acquainted with its locality and tbe state and condition of it; and consequently, if there be a public road or highway open or in use upon it, be must be taken to have seen it, and to have fixed in bis own mind tbe price be was willing to give -for tbe land with reference to tbe road.”
In Hymes v. Estey, 116 N. Y., 505, Justice Bradley says: “It must be deemed tbe settled doctrine in this State that tbe fact that part of tbe land conveyed with covenant of warranty was at tbe time of conveyance a highway, and used as such, is not a breach of the covenant. This is so for tbe reason that tbe grantee must be presumed to have known of tbe existence of tbe public easement, and purchased upon a consideration in reference to the situation in that respect.”
To same effect are Whitbeck v. Cook, 15 Johns. N. Y., 483; Huyck v. Andrews, 113 N. Y., 85; Wilson v. Cochran, 46 Penn. St., 229; Jordan v. Eve, 72 Va., 1; Pomeroy v. R. R. Co., 25 Wis., 644; Pick v. Hydraulic Co., 27 Wis., 443; Trice v. Kayton, 84 Va., 219-220, citing and approving Jordan v. Eve; Des Verges v. Willis, 56 Ga., 515.
In Kutz v. McCune, 22 Wis., 628, tbe Supreme Court of Wisconsin says: “That such a right does not constitute a breach of tbe covenant of seizin, see Rawls on Covenants, 83, 142. It may have been an encumbrance. But there is a principle rec*9ognized by adjudged cases, and resting upon sound reason and policy, which, bolds that purchasers of property obviously and notoriously subjected at the time to some right of easement or servitude affecting its physical condition, take it subject to such right without any express exceptions in the conveyance,- and that the vendors are not liable on their covenants by reason of its existence. This principle has been applied in the case of a highway opened and in use upon the land at the time of the conveyance. Eawls on Covenants, 141 et seq.”
There are a few adjudications looking to the contrary, especially in Indiana, where the rule is different. But the great weight of authority, we think, concurs with our own precedents. The point was considered in Ex parte Alexander, 122 N. C., 727, and this Court held that “The fact that a railroad was in actual operation over a tract of land at the time of the sale of the land was sufficient notice to the purchaser of the occupant’s equity or easement, and made it his duty to inquire for information.”
While the point was not squarely presented or decided in the more recent case of Tise v. Whitaker, 144 N. C., 515, Mr. Justice Ilolce recognizes the rule as we have here laid it down, and refers to it in these words: “The weight of authority is to the effect that, when the existence of a public right of way over land is fully known at the time of the purchase and acceptance of a deed for the land, its existence is no breach of the covenant of warranty, and there are well-considered decisions to the effect that such an easement is not a breach of the covenant against encumbrances. The parties are taken to have contracted with reference to the existence of a burden of which they are fully aware.”
When the plaintiffs purchased the land they knew of. the existence of the railroad and its right of way running over a portion of the land, and they are conclusively presumed to have purchased with reference to it.
The action cannot be maintained. ' The judgment sustaining the demurrer is
Affirmed.