24 A.D.2d 620 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1965
In an action to recover damages for trespass, negligence and nuisance; to enjoin defendant from continuing the acts complained of, and to direct him to abate and remove the nuisance, the defendant appeals from an order of the Supreme Court, Westchester County, entered March 9, 1965, which granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on their first cause of action based upon trespass and on their third cause of action based upon nuisance; directed an assessment of damages accordingly; enjoined defendant from continuance of the acts complained of and directed him to abate and remove the nuisance; directed that, within 30 days, he shall remove the debris on plaintiffs’ land and construct his wall in safe condition and further directed that he shall maintain his wall in such condition; and severed the second cause of action. Order modified on the law as follows: (1) by amending the first three decretal paragraphs so as to provide that plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is granted as to the third cause of action based upon nuisance and denied as to the first cause of action based upon trespass; so as to direct that plaintiffs have judgment against defendant on such third cause of action only; and so as to direct that the assessment of damages be had with respect to such third cause of action only; and (2) by amending the last decretal paragraph so as to provide that the first and second causes of action qre severed and that such causes of action shall continue as though judgment had not been granted upon the third cause of action. As so modified, order affirmed, without costs; and action remitted to the Special Term for the assessment of damages accordingly and for the entry of an appropriate judgment in accordance herewith. Defendant’s time to remove the debris from plaintiffs’ property and to construct the wall in a safe condition is extended until 40 days after entry of the order hereon. Plaintiffs and defendant are adjoining owners of residential parcels of real property. When defendant took title to his property in July, 1963, a high stone retaining wall consisting of large boulders stood on the rear of his parcel which abutted on part of the northern boundary of plaintiffs’ parcel. The stone retaining wall extends along the rear of defendant’s parcel and continues beyond defendant’s eastern boundary for the greater part of plaintiffs’ northern boundary. In November, 1963 a part of defendant’s retaining wall collapsed causing large boulders to fall upon and damage plaintiffs’ land. Thereafter, another part of the wall again collapsed. Temporary shorings were erected by the Village of Searsdale on plaintiffs’ land to prevent the further collapse of the wall. In June, 1964 defendant commenced an action against a construction company and others to recover damages because of the wall’s collapse. Defendant refused to repair the wall or to remove the debris from plaintiffs’ property. In July, 1964 plaintiffs commenced the action at bar against defendant alleging three causes of action, the first for trespass, the second for negligence and the third for nuisance. Plaintiffs demanded damages for each cause of action and, on the third cause of action, equitable relief requiring defendant to abate the nuisance. Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on the causes of action for trespass and nuisance was granted. Special Term held that the presence of the debris on plaintiffs’ land constitutes a continuing trespass and that such trespass, together with the condition of the wall remaining, constitutes a nuisance. Among other things, defendant was directed to remove the debris from plaintiffs’ land, to repair his wall and to maintain it in a safe condition. In our opinion, the proof before Special Term wholly failed to show a voluntary, affirmative act by the defendant which directly caused the collapse of the retaining wall on