Harwood v. Tompkins

24 N.J.L. 425 | N.J. | 1854

Opinion of the court by

Potts, J.

The action is in trespass on the case. The 4th count in the declaration alleges that the plaintiff, being possessed of a certain messuage, &c., used and occupied as the United States Hotel at Cape Island, on the Atlantic ocean, and having a right to erect, and having erected certain bath houses on the beach for the use of his lodgers, &c., the defendant wrongfully, &c., overturned, pulled down, and destroyed the same, &c.; and the, said plaintiff hath thereby been, and still is greatly annoyed, &c., and hath thereby lost divers great gains and profits, &c.

To this count the defendant demurs, on the ground that the injury complained of is a trespass, and not the proper subject matter of an action on the case. The plaintiff’s counsel in*426sists, however, that the injury alleged in this count is not the pulling down and destruction of the bath houses, but that the gravamen of the count is the damage he sustained by the loss of boarders, &c.

But this is a misconstruction of the language of the count. The act complained of, the injury alleged, the thing done, is the destruction of the bath houses. What follows is but the usual formal allegation of damages sustained in consequence of the act, contained in every declaration in trespass vi et arfáis. It is not unlike the cases of Wilson v. Smith, 10 Wendell 325, and Harker v. Birkbeck, 3 Burrowes 1556. Nor is there any thing in the suggestion of the plaintiff’s counsel, that if this is so, the demurrer can only be to the whole declaration for misjoinder. The demurrer is well taken to the count. It simply denies that, if the facts alleged in the count are true, a recovery can be had on it in this action. The ground of demurrer is not that two causes of action are improperly joined, but that the injury alleged in this count is not the proper subject matter of redress in such an action as this. As the count is bad for this reason, it is unnecessary to notice the other objections to it.

- The fifth count of the declaration alleges, among other things, that the plaintiff, being possessed, &c., of the messuage, &c., the defendant wrongfully, &c., kept and continued, and caused to be kept and continued, a certain building, ten-pin alley, and billiard room, before then erected and raised near the windows of the hotel, and obstructed, prevented, and destroyed the vieiv and sight of the said plaintiff and his boarders at his hotel aforesaid, &c., by means of which, &c. And the defendant demurs to this part of the count, and pleads to the remainder.

It is well settled that where part of a count in a declaration is sufficient, and part not, when the matters are divisible in their nature, the defendant may plead to the former and demur to the latter.’ 1 Chitty’s Pl. 658-9 (4th Am. ed.); Gould’s Pleading, § 49.

The only question remaining therefore is, whether an action lies for obstructing a view. The question, whether an action *427can be maintained in this country for stopping and obstructing lights, has undergone a good deal of discussion, and serious doubts have been entertained whether we are yet prepared to adopt the modern English doctrine, that twenty years adverse possession is sufficient to maintain such an action. Robinson v. Pittinger, 1 Green’s Ch. Rep. 57; Story v. Odin, 12 Mass. 157; Mahan v. Brown, 13 Wend. 261; Parker v. Foote, 19 Wend. 309; Ingraham v. Hutchinson, 2 Conn. Rep. 597. But however this may be, I am of opinion that an action does not lie for obstructing a vino, unless an express covenant not to obstruct can be shown. Aldred’s case, 9 Reports 58, b.; 2 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 473.

The demurrer is sustained, with leave to the plaintiff to amend.