Statement.
Plaintiff brings this suit to compel the defendant to demolish a certain “frame wall” or fence, and to recover damages for the alleged malicious deprivation and obstruction thereby of the enjoyment of the servitudes of view and of .drip, to which, as she alleges, her property is entitled. There was judgment in the district court, ordering the demolition of a portion of the fence, and condemning the defendant to pay $500 by way of exemplary damages. The defendant has appealed, and the plaintiff has answered, praying for an amendment of the judgment. The facts, as we find them from the evidence in the record, are as follows:
In 1893 the plaintiff purchased from Octave Morel and Séptima, his wife, a lot of ground, of irregular shape, in this city, fronting on Bourbon street, between Ursulines and Hospital, and extending back in the direction of Dauphine. There was included in the purchase a cottage, so situated upon the rear of the lot as to project some five feet beyond what would otherwise be its unbroken up-per side line, upon which side (towards; Ursulines street) there was, and is, a certain “Lot No. 1,” which also belonged to the Morels, by and between whom and the plaintiffs it was stipulated, in the act of sale to the latter, as follows, to wit:
“It is well agreed and understood between the parties hereto that the building in the rear of said property, known as the cottage, shall continue to enjoy the right of view and drip, as they now exist in favor of said cottage, and that said servitude shall so remain, to be enjoyed upon said Lot No. 1, as long as said: property shall not be demolished or so changed as to materially alter its present condition.”
At the date of the sale there were (as there are now) two windows in the cottage, opening on lot No. 1; i. e., one in the second room from the front, used as a bedroom, and another in the third room, used as a bathroom; and there was nothing whatever to interfere with the servitude of drip, and no other obstruction to the view from the windows mentioned, save a brick outbuilding, which stood on lot No. 1 at a distance of about 15 feet from the cottage. In November, 1903, defendant purchased lot No. 1 from Mrs. (Widow) Morel, and proceeded to build thereon a residence, the lower side of which is in front of, and perhaps 10 feet dis
Opinion.
There can be no doubt that the Morels, as the absolute owners of the entire property, had the right to establish, on the portion which they retained, and in favor of that portion which they sold, such servitudes as they thought proper, their power in that re-, spect being limited-only by considerations of public order; and that the use and extent of such servitudes are to be regulated by the titles by which they were established. Civ. Code, arts. 709, 716, 729, 743. The particular servitudes in question, being continuous and apparent (Civ. Code, arts. 727, 728), would have been established, under the circumstances, by the mere sale of the property in its then condition, though they had not been specially mentioned. Civ. Code, art. 709. But they would not, in that case, have included the right of prohibition of building on the adjoining lot, or of building above a particular height, which is a continuous, nonapparent servitude, and cannot be established, either by the destination du pere de famille, or by immemorial possession, but only by title. Civ. Code, arts. 505, 727, 728, 766, 770; Goodwin v. Alexander, 105 La. 658, 30 South. 102; Ribet v. Howard, 109 La. 113, 33 South. 103. It is true that Civ. Code, art. 771, provides that, “when a servitude is established, everything which,
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and'decreed that the judgment appealed from be amended by reserving to the plaintiff the right to recover any further damage that she may have sustained since the filing of this suit, or that she may hereafter sustain by reason of the fence or wooden barrier erected by the defendant, apd, as thus amended, affirmed; the defendant to pay the costs of the appeal.