74 Mo. 63 | Mo. | 1881
Lead Opinion
This is an action of ejectment, in which plaintiff seeks to recover a strip of land four and a half inches front on the north line of Carr street, in the city of St. Louis, by 155 feet in depth, which plaintiff claims is a part of lot number 5, in block 950. The petition is in the usual form, and the answer a general denial and the statute of limitations. There was a judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff appealed to the St. Louis court of appeals, where it was affirmed, and plaintiff has appealed to this court.
Plaintiff bought his lot, then unimproved, November 13th, 1865, and Lynch bought lot number 4, adjoining it. on the east, in December, 1866. Desiring to build on his
In Herman on Estoppel, the doctrine is thus stated: “ Before the party is concluded by an estoppel, it must appear, 1st, That he has made an admission which is clearly inconsistent with the evidence he proposes to give, or the title or the claim he proposes to set up. 2nd, That the other party has acted on the admission. 3rd, That the other party will be injured by allowing the truth of the admission to be disproved. When the acts and representations of the party must have influenced the other to do acts which he would not otherwise have done, and when a denial or repudiation must operate to the injury of such other party, the estoppel is created.” Rage 337. Taylor v. Zepp, 14 Mo. 482; Bales v. Perry, 51 Mo. 449; Spur-
It appears that after Acton and Lynch moved into their respective houses, Acton had permission from Lynch to use his fence as the east wall of a coal-shed which Acton built on his own lot, but it nowhere appears that Lynch’s improvements were not then completed, or that Lynch, in consequence of such recognition of the line by Acton, made any further improvements. In fact, the evidence clearly shows that not by anything said or done by Acton, or by his silence, was Lynch induced or encouraged to make his improvements to the west line, as ascertained by Cozzens, but that he relied exclusively upon that survey. The fact that Acton had permission to use Lynch’s fence as a wall for his coal-shed, that he complained to Lynch that his cornice projected several feet over on his lot, and that he ascertained the western line of his lot by measuring twenty-five feet from Lynch’s wall, might be admissible as evidence to prove an agreement between the parties to establish the Cozzens line as the true line, if there were not in the case the positive testimony of both Lynch and Acton that there was no such agreement. There is no claim that there was an agreement, and nothing is relied upon but an estoppel in pais. There is an absence of nearly all the elements of an estoppel as against Acton; and Lynch could with more propriety be held to be estopped from disputing the Cozzens line, in a controversy in which that question should
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring. — I think the evidence in this case establishes the fact that Acton accepted the line as located by the survey of Cozzens as the true line between