70 N.Y.S. 492 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action was brought for equitable relief, to compel by injunction the removal of the northerly wall of the building of the Manhattan Life Insurance Company, No. 66 Broadway, together with the iron shutters and cornice upon said wall, upon the ground that they project over the plaintiff’s boundary line, and overhang and encroach upon plaintiff’s adjoining property.
The plaintiff is the owner of a parcel of land on the easterly side of Broadway, south of Wall street (No. 70 Broadway), extending through to New street. The premises are entirely covered by a four-story brownstone building and were acquired by plaintiff by deed on the 14th day of July, 1897.
The defendant is the owner of a parcel of land immediately adjoining the plaintiff’s said premises on. the south, also extending from Broadway to New street, which it acquired on the 6th day of April, 1892, upon which it erected in .1893, 1894, a sixteen-story building of iron, stone and brick. The building upon the plaintiff’s premises has stood for more than twenty years.
The alleged causes of complaint are two: (1) That the north wall of defendant’s structure, which is three hundred feet high, overhangs its base and encroaches upon plaintiff’s land; (2) that the cornices and iron window shutters do likewise; and plaintiff asks that defendant be compelled to remove the encroachments. The defendant denies the encroachment and overhang of its wall, and alleges that plaintiff’s wall overhangs its base and encroaches upon defendant’s property, and asks for a mandatory injunction for its removal. The encroachment of the defendant’s cornices and of the window shutters, when open,, is admitted. The alleged encroachment of defendant’s wall divides itself into two parts; an alleged overset of between two and three inches beginning at the roof of plaintiff’s building; and the gradually increasing overhang from that point to the roof of defendant’s structure, where, as it is averred, it is between four and six inches, making the total encroachment from six to nine inches, the testimony of the witnesses varying as to the extent.
The trial court found and decided that defendant’s wall at New street overhangs to the extent of one and one-eighth inches at the roof of plaintiff’s building, and that, between the roof of defendant’s
The trial court further found that defendant’s wall at the roof of plaintiff’s building set over plaintiff’s roof two and five:eighths inches at the ■ Broadway front and one and one-eighth inches at the New street front, but that although the.wall overhangs the plaintiff’s building at the roof at the Broadway front, such- overhang does not constitute an encroachment for the reason that it does not overhang plaintiff’s true southerly boundary line.
Upon the trial this apparent encroachment at the Broadway front was attempted to be accounted for by the alleged fact that when the excavation was made in 1893, for the foundation of defendant’s present structure, plaintiff’s building slid into the excavation two and five-eighths inches or thereabouts, and now rests upon defendant’s land to that extent, and this is the basis of the defendant’s alleged cause of action for the encroachment of plaintiff’s building upon its land.
It is the finding of the court, and the evidence supports the finding, that the defendant’s wall projects over the roof of the plaintiff’s building about two and five-eighths inches at the Broadway front, but that such projection does not carry the wall over defendant’s true line at the surface of the street. The court has not found that the plaintiff’s structure, at the roof, overhangs upon the defendcmt’s property. It is claimed that the court’s finding in this respect is inconsistent, and such would seem to be the ease, for if the defendant’s wall at the roof of plaintiff’s building does not project over the defendant’s line, then the wall of plaintiff’s building at that point must project over the defendant’s line, as one projection is necessarily dependent upon the other.- The finding of the court that defendant’s wall at this point does not constitute an encroachment is supported by the testimony, and it necessarily follows, from such fact, that there must be an encroachment upon the defendant’s land at the roof of plaintiff’s building. It may be that the defendant is the one responsible for such encroachment, ■ but, however it may
It is the contention of the plaintiff that he has resorted to the only remedy afforded him to obtain adequate relief, and it may be that he is right in such contention; there being no encroachment over his line upon the ground, ejectment would not lie; such action would be fruitless of results, as no judgment could pass putting him in possession of his property above the surface of the ground. It seems to be conceded, however, and such is the law, that he might maintain an action at law to recover damage for the trespass and would have a continuing right to maintain such action so long as the trespass continued. (Uline v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 101 N. Y. 98; Covert v. City of Brooklyn, 6 App. Div. 73; 13 id. 188.) It cannot be said, however, that his right to maintain the action at law for damages furnished an adequate remedy upon the facts of the present case, as it would at no time place him in the enjoyment of his property. Upon this state of the law and the facts, the plaintiff contends that not only is he authorized to maintain an action in equity, but that he is entitled as matter of absolute right, as the only equitable relief which may be rgranted, or which the court is authorized to give, to a mandatory injunction requiring
Upon the present record it appears that the plaintiff’s structure consists of a four-story building, which in its present state of use is wholly as available as it would have been had the defendant’s wall been constructed for the entire distance upon its true line. The damage which the plaintiff sustains by reason of the encroachment rests in the fact that when use is attempted to be made of the space above his building the encroachment of the defendant’s wall will necessitate the diminishing somewhat the thickness of the plaintiff’s wall at the points of encroachment. It appears, however, that such a building as may be erected by the plaintiff will have for its support. the wall of the defendant’s structure, although not a- party wall, and further that in modern- construction the walls of a building are a mere screen and are no longer, used for the purpose of support of the' building, it being supported inside of the walls from the foundations up according to varying plans of construction, and it is this part of the structure which supports the building, the walls
The defendant’s condition is entirely different. It appears that when it began the excavation for the foundation of its building it went down four or five feet below the cellar of the plaintiff’s building, at which point it sunk caissons to bed rock, a distance of fifty-four feet. These caissons were filled in with concrete and formed a foundation which would not settle. When the excavation below the cellar of the plaintiff’s building was made, or at the time the work was being prosecuted, it was found neces
It is a well-settled equitable principle that strict enforcement of a contract right will not be granted where such enforcement would impose great hardship upon the contracting party, with little or no corresponding benefit to the other party thereto. (Trustees of Columbia College v. Thacher, 87 N. Y. 311.) In this case the equitable power of the court was invoked for the purpose of enforcing a specific covenant which had been violated, and relief was denied, for the reason that the circumstances existing at the time when the covenant was made had so far changed, and the premises to which it applied were no longer aided by it, that its enforcement would be oppressive upon the defendant and of little value to the party seeking it, and that, therefore, it would be inequitable to enforce it. The principle has been many times asserted. (Gray v. Manhattan R. Co., 128 N. Y. 499 ; Riedeman v. Mt. Morris Electric Light Co., 56 App. Div. 23.) There can be no difference in principle between the enforcement of a legal right created by covenant and the enforcement of any other legal right created by operation of law. The principle which grants or withholds equitable relief is precisely the same in each case. The law which vests in the plaintiff the right to have, enjoy and use his land both above and below the surface of the ground, is no higher in degree than would be the
We believe that the principle is so elastic. It is to be borne in mind, as we have before observed, that both parties appear in this court demanding equitable relief. Under such circumstances and the circumstances of this case, we think it established by authority and also time in principle that the court can retain jurisdiction of the case and award the damages which the plaintiff might otherwise seek on the law side of the court (Phillips v. Thompson, 1 Johns. Ch. 131, 150), where the court says, after citing cases: “ In both those cases, which were bills for specific performance, the defendant had put it out of his power to perform the contract, and the court retained the bills and referred it to a master to assess the
None of the cases relied upon by the plaintiff conflict with this view, but on the contrary support it. In Corning v. Troy Iron & Nail Factory (40 N. Y. 191) the plaintiff sought to obtain a permanent injunction restraining the defendant from diverting a watercourse. Therein the right to the injunction was upheld, but it was so upheld for the reason that the defendant on account of the expiration of its lease had ceased to have any right whatever to divert the flow of the water as against the plaintiffs in the action. It was urged that the injunction should be denied for the reason that great damage would be inflicted upon the defendant without corresponding benefit to the plaintiff. This view was rejected, not for the reason that the principle might not be applied in a proper case — indeed, that was admitted — but upon the ground that the plaintiff might make the same use of the water privilege which the defendant was making. In other words, it did not appear but that the plaintiff would derive the same benefit if his legal
The relative positions of the parties with respect to the swinging shutters and the projecting cornices are entirely different. The defendant knew, or if not, was chargeable with knowledge, that these structures encroached upon the plaintiff’s property rights; they are, therefore, unlawful in their character, and defendant may invoke no equitable principle for their protection. The principle enunciated in the cases we have cited condemns their existence. In this respect, therefore, the plaintiff became entitled to a mandatory injunction restraining their maintenance and compelling their removal. The court is not authorized, under such circumstances, to permit their retention for any period, or couple the same with any condi
The judgment should be modified as above indicated,, and as modified affirmed, with costs to the appellant.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and. as modified affirmed, with costs to appellant.