116 A.2d 583 | D.C. | 1955
After more, than -five years of litigation the parties to this dispute are before us for the third time. It started early. in 1950 when Christopher sued Shapiro for possession ofr a vacant lot and for'$1,250 rent in arrears. That suit found its way. to this court and from here to the United States Court of Appeals.
Defendant then filed an answer and after a trial on the merits the trial court made written findings of fact to the effect that defendant’s use of the lot was not continuous; that he had used it only occasionally for the parking of a truck or trucks, or for the temporary placing of plumbing pipes; that there was no sufficient evidence to show the number of times the lot was so used; and that there was no evidence to show how and to what extent plaintiff was damaged. Concluding that plaintiff had not shown more than nominal damages, the trial judge awarded him the sum of one dollar. The case has now been brought here by plaintiff who contends that he should have been awarded the full amount of his claim for rent for the 22 months period to which we have already referred.
Appellant’s contentions are that the trial court was wrong in finding that there was no continuous occupation by Shapiro and in failing to find that Shapiro had continued to assert his right to possession during the entire period involved.
There is no reason for attempting a recital of the involved and complicated evidence. Viewed most favorably to him, plaintiff’s evidence tended to show a frequent, if not wholly continuous, use by Shapiro of part of the lot by placing thereon pipes and plumbing items, and the occasional parking of trucks. Viewed in a less favorable light, it might well have been regarded by the trial court as vague, self-contradictory, and far from satisfactory. More important, the defendant contradicted plaintiff on every point, emphatically stating that he had removed all his belongings from the lot in March 1950 and that he did not afterwards use the lot for any purpose. There was also testimony that some of the articles on the lot which Christopher said belonged to Shapiro were in fact the property of Christopher. Clearly the judge had a right to choose between these conflicting versions, and we would have no basis for saying that his decision was erroneous. It is true that three photographs were presented by plaintiff showing Shapiro’s trucks parked on the lot, twice on Sundays and once on a New Year’s Eve holiday. But these three instances did not require the judge to rule that there had been a continuous trespass, or that plaintiff was entitled to anything more than nominal damages.
Affirmed.
. See Christopher v. Shapiro, D.C.Mun.App., 76 A.2d 781; Shapiro v. Christopher, 90 U.S.App.D.C. 114, 195 F.2d 785.