48 Neb. 505 | Neb. | 1896
Plaintiff is tbe owner of a parcel of ground in Nebraska City having a north frontage on Main street of twenty-two feet, from whence said parcel extends south
The petition recited plaintiff’s title and all the above described facts, which, as he claimed, entitled him to prevent the placing of a fourth story upon the 'wall of which his west side constituted the first story. There were averments of the insufficient thickness of the wall already in existence to sustain another story, but these we do not feel called upon to describe or discuss at great length. The answer contained a general denial, followed by these averments: “Second — The said defendant * * * alleges that this defendant and his grantors have for twenty years last past been in open, notorious, peaceable, exclusive, and adverse possession of the property known as the Barnum House, or Watson Hotel, claiming the same as owners against the plaintiff and his grantors and all persons whomsoever. Third— The said defendant * * * further * * * alleges that during the spring of 1868 this defendant’s grantor,
The issues presented by the general denial contained in the answer have already been sufficiently covered for general purposes by the statement of the facts hereinbe-fore made. There are questions of law incidental to
In Mendenhall v. Harrisburgh Water-Power Co., 39 Pac. Rep., 399, the supreme court of Oregon held that an injunction would lie to prevent the widening of a ditch for a water-course through plaintiff’s land and the erection of a dam which would destroy plaintiff’s ford, defendant having no legal right to either. The ground upon which this seems to have been placed was that from the nature of the excavation an injury to plaintiff’s easement was likely to result. In support of the conclusion reached there were cited Smith v. Gardner, 12 Ore., 221; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Porter, 72 Ia., 426. In the case at bar it was shown that the original foundation wall had been of the thickness of fifteen inches; that this had been re-enforced afterward by a wall twelve inches in thickness, and that from the top of the re-enforced wall the prolongation to the height of two stories was twelve inches in thickness, and from thence upward, inclusive of the fourth story, the wall is of the thickness of nine inches, and, by much evidence adduced by plaintiff, it was shown that from the fourth story being erected upon its narrow foundation as described, there are grounds for apprehending serious injuries to the property of the plaintiff. If the evidence is sufficient to sustain this contention, there can be no doubt that plaintiff is entitled to an injunction against the erection and continuance of the fourth story of the wall in question which threatens the
Reversed and remanded.