61 N.J. Eq. 438 | New York Court of Chancery | 1901
Complainant is the owner of a lot, 52 Halsey street, Newark, and defendants are the owners of lot, 50 Halsey street, adjoining complainant’s lot on the north. Upon complainant’s lot there is a dwelling-house, built on or close to her north line, and upon defendants’ lot there was, at the time of their purchase of the lot in 1899, a brick dwelling-house, extending back beyond complainant’s dwelling and also higher than complainant’s house. There was a space of about four feet between the two houses, the vacant space being altogether, or nearly so, on defendants’ lot, No. 50. There are, and were at the time of defendants’ purchase of lot 50, three windows in the north side of complainant’s house, opening, or which can open, towards this four-foot space, two of the windows being in the second story and one in the third, which is an attic story, the window being in the gable. Defendants purchased lot 50 for the purpose of erecting thereon and on adjoining lots, covering nearly half a city block, a store building, and they have torn down the brick building on the lot 50, and intend to erect on the southerly boundary line of their lot, being the northely boundary of complainant’s lot, a wall extending along the whole distance covered by complainant’s house, and to at least the full height of complainant’s house and of the store building, which is about ninety feet in height. The building, if so erected, will deprive.complainant’s dwelling of light and air through her windows, and the question in the case is whether complainant has the right to protection against such deprivation. The original easement for light and air over lot 50 to the dwelling on lot 52 arose from the facts that lots 50 and 52 were originally owned as a single lot by one Samuel Sayre, who purchased the property as a single lot, fronting fifty-two feet on Halsey street, on June 3d, 1831, and in 1832, while still owning the entire lot, erected on lot 52 a frame dwelling-house, with three windows on the north side thereof, toward the lot now called No. 50. This house (which was afterwards raised up one story) was originally a one-story house, with an attic, and the windows in the house (being the same as the windows now there) were originally located two on the first story and one in the second story or
In reference to the right to an easement of light and air over defendants’ lot to complainant’s house, it was admitted by counsel on both sides that, under the decisions, there could be no contest in this court in reference to two propositions. The -first is, that, on the separation of the title of the two lots (50 and 52), by the conveyance of lot Ho. 52, with the building thereoú erected, an easement for light and air over lot Ho. 50 was created, or arose by implication, in favor of the building then erected on the grantee’s lot, Ho. 52. Robeson v. Pittenger, 1 Gr. Ch. 57 (Chancellor Pennington, 1838); Sutphen v. Therkelson, 11 Stew. Eq. 318, 322 (Chancellor Runyon, 1884); Greer v. Van Meter, 9 Dick. Ch. Rep. 279, 272 (Vice-Chancellor Reed, 1896). The second is, that complainant did not, and could not, acquire an easement for light and air over defendants’ lot in the changed location of the windows merely by adverse use or-enjoyment since 1855. Hayden v. Dutcher, 4 Stew. Eq. 217 (Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, 1879). The questions argued in the ease were, therefore, first, whether the original easement acquired by the conveyance of lot Ho. 52, on the separation of the title, extended to the same windows in their location as changed by the raising 'of the house, and second, if it did not extend to the windows in their changed location, then whether the easement for the windows in their original location in the north wall of the house still existed and could be now re-established and reasserted, or whether the original easement has been abandoned. In City National Bank v. Van Meter, 14 Dick. Ch. Rep. 32 (1899), the facts were that the owner of a building which had an easement of light and air to a window therein, removed the building for the purpose of erecting a new one. the plans for the erection of the new building showing a new window in substantially the same location as the window of the old building. Vice-Chancellor Reed considered the question involved to be the single question, whether the easement was abandoned by the destruction of the old building. He held, as the result of an examination of' that question, that the abandonment of an
Complainant’s bill alleges that the windows of her house, as at present located, are the windows of the house as originally built, and the bill was framed on this theory. The complainant’s own evidence having disclosed, however, that this was a misapprehension, and that Mr. Dreer, the complainant’s witness, had the house raised in 1855, complainant now claims that if the windows in their changed condition have no right of access for light and air, she has the right to restore or re-establish the windows in the original location and have this right established in the present bill.
If this question were properly at issue on the pleadings, and within the jurisdiction of the court, I should be inclined, on the evidence before me, to hold that the easement for the old windows had been abandoned. As to the light of the first-story windows, the facts are these: a solid wall has been built, and all effort to obtain light for that story, from windows opening on the adjoining lot, has been abandoned for over forty years, and purchases of the adjoining property have been made without notice of any claim to such an easement. The same observation may be made about the closing, on the new second story, of the location of the old attic window, and it may also be noted that this window, if replaced, would probably open on the stairs leading from the second to the third story, and be of no use or benefit in the enjoyment of the hall, which already receives so much light that the new second-story window has been unopened for years. But the whole question as to the complainant’s right to restore the ancient windows, or her right to prevent obstruction, if restored, is one of legal right. There is not, in reference to this right, a question calling for equitable interference in advance of a determination of the legal right in the courts of law, as there is in reference to the right now claimed to the existing windows which were used and necessary for the beneficial en
There is a line of cases which holds that where the owner of the adjoining servient tenement consents to the alteration of the location of the lights in the course of the rebuilding, by the owner of the dominant tenement, and the latter owner makes the alteration and lays out money in rebuilding, relying on this' consent, a court of equity will enjoin interference with the lights in the altered location. Cotching v. Bassett, 32 Beav. 101 (Romilly, M. R., 1862). In the present case, the erection of the three-story brick building within four feet of the complainant’s house interfered, to some extent, with the easement previously enjoyed, and if the raising of complainant’s house, changing the location of the windows, had taken place before or contemporaneously with the erection of the brick house, these facts, in connection with the long-continued enjoyment of the use of the light and air from the new windows, might, perhaps, have been sufficient to justify a court of equity in finding a consent to the change of location of the windows. But as the complainant’s house was raised subsequently to the erection of the brick house, this raising of the house and changing the location of the windows may just as reasonably be attributed to the owners being willing to take the risk, as to their building, of any removal or change