42 Mo. App. 551 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
In July, 1885, the plaintiff and the defendant were the owners of adjoining lots in the city of St. Louis. The house on the plaintiff’s land was erected in 1849, and it was built immediately on the line between the two lots. About a year thereafter the owner of the adjoining lot, under whom the defendant claims, also built a house, and in doing so the building was extended to the limit of the lot next to the plaintiff’s building. In the erection of this house, the owner was permitted, under some kind of a license, to use the west wall of the building first constructed. Under this license or agreement, the ends of the beams and the timbers supporting the stairway of the new building were inserted into, and supported by, the west wall of the house afterwards purchased by the plaintiff.
The answer to the first count was, in effect, a general denial. The answer also contained a' denial of the cause of action stated in the second count, and, as a special defense, the defendant claimed that under the contract for the use of the west wall, the plaintiff’s house and lot were made servient to the house and lot of the defendant; and, further, that, if the plaintiff had acquired a prescriptive right to have his house supported by the soil of the defendant’s lot, this right had been forfeited or waived by additions and alterations made to the plaintiff ’ s house in 1879, by reason of which the burden upon the defendant’s soil had been greatly
In reference to the first count the plaintiff complains of, and assigns for error, the refusal of the court to give the following instruction: “The court, sitting as a jury, declares the law to be that, if the court finds from the evidence that, at the time of the alleged damages in the first count of his j)etition, the building of plaintiff was occupied by a tenant under a lease from plaintiff for a term of nine years, which said lease required said tenant to restore to plaintiff said building in good repair, and that the damages alleged in said first count were to the leasehold estate, and not to the reversionary estate, then plaintiff cannot recover on said first count of his petition, and the court will find for defendant on said first count.”
The plaintiff ’ s contention is that there is no testimony in the case, upon which this instruction could be predicated; that the plaintiff, in his offer of proof, included the lease which showed that the land was leased for nine years, and that it, together with the other evidence included in the offer, was rejected by the court. The plaintiff’s counsel states the record correctly. We will rule this assignment against the defendant. However, if there should be a retrial of this case, the views of this court on the question sought to be raised will be found in the case of Bobb v. Syenite Granite Co., 41 Mo. App. 642, decided at the present term of this court.
We now come to the consideration of the legal questions involved in the second cause of action. As heretofore stated, the plaintiff does not claim that the defendant was guilty of any negligence in making the
The court adopted the theory that a land-owner could, by prescription, acquire the right to the lateral support of his buildings by the soil on his neighbor’s land ; and that, in order to accomplish this, no actual occupancy or adverse user of any portion of his neighbor’s land was necessary. And the same idea, in a qualified sense, seems to be conveyed in the instruction asked by the defendant and refused by the court. However, we find that it is impracticable for us to dispose of the assignments of error without passing on the real question upon which the plaintiff’s right of action is predicated.
The trial court and counsel doubtless were controlled by the decision of this court in the case of Casselberry v. Ames, 13 Mo. App. 575, in which this court recognized the English doctrine of lateral support, acquired by prescription, for ancient structures. In view of the fact that the discussion of the question was not necessary to the determination of that case, and from the further consideration, that the question was not argued by the defendant in error, we have concluded to re-examine the question.
Can the right of lateral support, when treated as an acquired easement, be upheld when the tests laid down by Mr. Washburn are applied? That some of. the English authorities hold to the affirmative of this question cannot be doubted (Stansell v. Jollard, 1 Selw.
But we ask how can any such presumption be indulged in against the defendant in this case, or his grantors? The plaintiff’s grantor had the undoubted right to extend his building to the very verge of his lot. The defendant’s grantor could in.no way object to this. Yet, according to the English rule, although his hands were tied as it were, he was compelled to stand by and see a property right pass from him through no fault of his. As well might it be said that he could lose the title to his land by a stealthy or secret use.
_We find the most satisfactory discussion of this question -in Mitchell v. Mayor, etc., 49 Ga. 19. A few
Justice G-eay in .the case of Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199, 207, thus expresses himself on the subject: “It is difficult to see liow the owner of a house can acquire by prescription a right to have it supported by the adjoining land, inasmuch as he does nothing upon, and has no use of, that land, which can be seen, or known, or interrupted, or sued for by the owner thereof, and, therefore, no assent of the latter can be presumed to the
In the notes of Bennett’s edition of Goddard’s Law of Easements, at page 231, we find this: “Notwithstanding the numerous English authorities,, supposed to sanction the doctrine of a prescriptive right for the support of buildings, cited by Mr. Goddard, it may be more than doubted whether such a proposition will be established on this side of the Atlantic. The reasons against it are the same as those against a prescriptive right to light and air, which, with the authorities on the subject, are given in the preceding part of this work. It is true many dicta may be found in the American reports sustaining such a doctrine, and Judge Washburn, in his excellent treatise on easements, assumes it as settled law, and perhaps it has been generally so understood in the profession; but if, as all agree, prescription rests for its basis upon an implied acquiescence of the adverse party; if, as none deny, no acquiescence can be implied in an act which such adverse party has no legal right or remedy to prevent; and if, as is clear, one land-owner has no legal power to prevent another from erecting and maintaining a building on his own land, even ad ocelum, it is difficult, if not impossible, to understand how the continuance of such a building for twenty, or even a hundred, years, can raise a presumption of assent in one who has no power or right to dissent. He cannot tear down the house; he cannot bring an action for its erection ; he cannot even dig down on his own land and let it fall before it has
The supreme court of Virginia takes a similar view of the subject. In the case of Tunstall v. Christian, 80 Va. 1, the court, speaking through Judge Lewis, said: “ The doctrine may well enough apply to the acquisition of a right of way, or to the use of water and the like, but it is difficult to see how, on principle, it can be held to apply to a case like the present; for, when a man builds on his own soil to its extremity, he simply exercises a lawful right. He does not encroach upon the soil or invade the rights of his neighbor, and consequently there is nothing of which the latter can complain. Now, to acquire an easement by prescription, it is essential that the user be not only honest and uninterrupted for a number of years, but open and adverse, and it must be with the acquiescence of the owner of the servient tenement. But how, under the circumstances mentioned, can there be said to be an adverse use of another’s property? Or how can the acquiescence of one in an act be implied, who has neither the right nor the power to prevent it? ” See also note to the case of Thurston v. Hancock, 7 Am. Dec. 62.
And even the English courts have begun to question this doctrine. In 1887, it was discussed in the Queen’s Bench in the case of Angus v. Dalton, 3 Q. B. Div. 85, and Chief Justice Cookbubn, in the course of his opinion, treated of this prescriptive right as follows: “In every other form of easement the party, whose right as owner is prejudicially affected by the user, has the means of resisting it, if illegally exercised. In the
It will be thus seen that Chief Justice Cocicburn thinks there is some excuse for the law of ancient lights, bu t that, in his opinion, there is no 'reason whatever in the rule which permits one man to obtain a property-right in the lands of his neighbor, when the right of protection against the encroachment is absolutely denied to the latter. Now, in all the American states, with but few possible exceptions, the ancient common law in reference to lights has been repudiated. The reason assigned for its rejection is, that it is not suited to the condition of a country which is growing. In Parker v. Foote, 19 Wend. 309, it is styled, “the modern English doctrine:” “an anomaly in the law;” “a departure from the old law.” And the court there says: “It may do well enough in England. * * * But it cannot be applied in the growing cities and villages of this country without working the most mischievous con- • sequences.”
Such is our opinion concerning the acquisition of the right of lateral support of adjacent soil by prescription. We think it ought to go the way of the law of
Our conclusion is that the case of Casselberry v. Ames, supra, must be overruled, in so far as it undertakes to decide the question here in judgment. This conclusion must necessarily invalidate the finding of the court under the second count. The judgment of the circuit court will, therefore, be reversed, and the cause remanded, unless the plaintiff will, within ten days from the delivery of this opinion, remit the amount of the recovery under the second count. If this is .done, then the judgment will be affirmed for the residue. It is so ordered.