28 A.D. 181 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
In this action it was sought to obtain an injunction against the defendants from interfering with an independent wall on the north side of. the building Ho. 471 Broadway, in the city of Hew York, which was originally constructed some thirty or forty years ago. The adjoining building, Ho. 473 Broadway, which was constructed about forty years ago, was torn .down to make room for a larger building, In connection with the latter the defendant Little claimed that part of. the north wall of Ho. 471 encroached upon his lot, and he started to cut channels in it upon which to rest iron beams. The complaint alleges “ that the said wall is on the property of these, plaintiffs, and these plaintiffs have, as they are informed and believe, the right to maintain it as it now stands, but the defendants propose to and will, unless restrained as aforesaid, trespass without right, authority or due process of law, but with force and violence will enter upon these plaintiffs’ .property and remove a portion of said wall as aforesaid, and these plaintiffs aver that the maintenance of said wall does not trespass upon the defendants’ said property and the defendants well know the fact so to be. Wherefore, these plaintiffs demand that the defendants * * * be forever enjoined and restrained from in any manner interfering with or removing any part of the northerly wall of the plaintiffs’ building * * * or interfering with plaintiffs’ possession thereof, and that the plaintiffs have such other, further or different judgment,, order or relief in the premises as may be just and equitable.” ■
In his opening the plaintiffs’ counsel stated that he would prove that, the plaintiffs having failed to obtain a preliminary injunction, the defendant Little proceeded and-cut into the wall, and afterwards, in the construction of his building, he carried it up flush to the'wall
For the purpose of determining whether this ruling was right, the plaintiffs must be treated as though they had proved every allegation in their complaint and in the opening of their counsel. In other words, what, under the allegations of their complaint, they could prove and offered to prove, must be taken as proved, in testing the correctness of the learned judge’s decision. The plaintiffs’ counsel in his opening stated that they were prepared to prove that they were entitled to the. possession of their northerly wall just as it stood before the defendant took down the old adjoining building and commenced the construction of the new one, and that the threatened acts of the defendant ripened into an actual trespass during the pendency of the action, by his unlawfully trespassing, without right or authority, upon their premises and removing a portion of their wall, which, as a result, was rendered unsafe and subsequently had to be taken down, and that in constructing his new biiilding the defendant has appropriated the portion of the plaintiffs’ premises in dispute. •
Assuming, as we must, that the plaintiffs could prove these facts by competent evidence, we think it needs no discussion but the simple statement to show that they are entitled to relief. The fact that the defendant has completed his building in no way affects this right. At the time the action was commenced the plaintiffs were entitled to restrain the threatened invasion of their property, and their failure' to obtain a preliminary injunction is by no means conclusive, because that necessarily had’ to be disposed of upon the showing made upon the motion. At that, time the plaintiffs’ claim to the land in dispute was denied, and it was because of the failure to produce conviction in the mind of the court upon the conflicting affidavits that the relief by way of preliminary injunction was withheld. Taking the allegations of the complaint and the statements of counsel in his opening as established, it would appear that the defendant has appropriated a portion of the plaintiffs’ property by constructing the wall of his
We think that the judgment was wrong and should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, with costs to appellant.