103 Ind. 155 | Ind. | 1885
The controversy which resulted in the bringing of this action arose out of substantially the following state
Questions were reserved below upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding, as well as upon the admission and exclusion of evidence. The damp and damaged condition of the wall was a practically admitted fact at the trial. All the witnesses who had examined it testified to the wet and rotten condition of the plastering and papering in certain places. Some of the witnesses held and advocated conflicting theories as to where the water came from which inflicted the injuries complained of.
The theory of the defence was that the water came from the ground below in which the foundation of the wall was laid.
One Hubbard was called as a witness by the appellant. He testified that he had been a bricklayer and plasterer for thirty years continuously; that he was one of the contractors who had built the house belonging to the appellees; that he had also helped build all of the walls except two of the six buildings immediately west of the Draper building; that when he and his co-contractor caused the ground to be excavated for the foundations of the north, east and south walls of the appellees’ building, water came out from under the Draper building, and those other buildings west, and filled up the excavations, so that the foundations of these walls had to be laid in water.
A hypothetical case, covering the leading facts testified to, and practically admitted, as above, was stated to the witness, upon which his opinion was asked as to what produced the dampness on the west, or inside of the wall of which the appellees complained. This question was accompanied by a statement that the appellant expected to prove by the witness that in his opinion the dampness came from below, and not
In our view of this case, these rulings restricted the appellant too much, and very materially, in his defence. Hubbard showed himself to be an expert in the matters of bricklaying and plastering, and nothing has been presented from which we can infer that the appellant was not entitled to his opinion as to what caused the bad condition of the wall. City of Indianapolis v. Huffer, 30 Ind. 235. The bad condition from dampness, if such was their condition, of other brick walls in the immediate vicinity, against which there were no drippings from the eaves of any house, also constituted circumstances which the appellant had a right to have considered by the court.
The evidence tended very clearly to establish the fact that the appellees’ building lapped over onto, and appropriated, a small strip of the subdivision of ground upon which the frame house was at the time standing. Conceding that fact to have been satisfactorily established, as it seemingly was, we regard it as fatal to the appellees’ right to recover in this action. It will not do to hold that the proprietor of a building may extend his building over on to his neighbor’s ground, where a house is already standing, and then be heard to complain that his neighbor’s house is too close, or in injurious proximity to his building. In any view which we have been able to take, the case is an unsatisfactory one upon the evidence.
Whether, when a person, building a house in close proximity to the drippings from the eaves of his neighbor’s house, where such drippings naturally fall upon his neighbor’s side of the partition line, is, or is not, bound to fend off against the injurious consequences which may result from the drippings, is a question not now before us, and hence is one upon which we express no opinion at the present hearing.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.