47 App. D.C. 356 | D.C. Cir. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The points relied on by appellant are four. We shall consider them separately, but not in the order stated by him. First: lie asserts that there is error in the exclusion of certain testimony offered by him for the purpose of showing* that the appellee had erected a party wall on the south line of her property long before he had attempted to construct one on the north line. In view of the conclusion which we have reached on the whole case, it is not necessary to pass upon this.
Second: Was appellee silent when she should have spoken, as appellant charges ? The argument of appellant with respect to this is based chiefly on certain correspondence which passed between G'eorge 0. Totten, Jr., the architect and agent of the appellant, and Mrs. Boyts, who was at Connellsville, Pennsylvania, at the time. Mr. Totten wrote to her that he had “just made1 drawings for an addition to Mia T. T. Mann’s residence,” and that the addition would “extend to the party line between your property” and his; he stated that according to his drawings, the moldings and cornice of the addition would extend over her property “perhaps a foot,” and asked her to consent to the extension, .lie inclosed a draft of a letter giving consent and addressed to the building inspector, for her signature; and added that if she refused, Mr. Mann had the right to build the wall “centered on the party line.” She promptly declined to consent and so notified Mr. Totten by letter, which he admits receiving. None the less, the appellant constructed a Avail not extending “to the party line between” the properties, but reaching over the line oyj inches. She had no knowledge that he was 'doing so until July 26, about two months after she had Avritten her letter of refusal, Avhen, after her return to Washington, she discovered that the wall Avas nearly finished. This is all upon the subject. She had a right to assume that Totten was telling her the truth, AA’hen he said that the drawings contemplated a Avail which Avould go to the “party line” only, except- the cornice and moldings; and it docs not lie in his mouth or that, of his principal to say now that because she did, she is estopped from challenging the validity of an act which she
Third: We uoav come to the most difficult phase of the case. Did the appellant have the legal right, under the circumstances disclosed by the record, to erect the Avail in controversy? Both lots Avere improved. The plaintiff had upon hers a spacious brick dwelling house, four stories and basement high, containing about twenty-five rooms, built in 1SS7 and occupied by her as a residence. It Avas valued at $40,000. The building Avas so erected that there Avas a space of over 40 feet between it and the sidewalk. Between it and the property of the defendant was a concrete Avalk running the full depth of the building, 74 feet. On the second story, north side, about midway the length of the building, Avas an oriole octagon bay AvindoAv projecting aborit 8 feet, 5 inches, from the main dwelling and leaving a space of 5 ¿4 inches between its outer edge and the defendant’s lot line, except that there were a cornice and trimmings upon the AvindoAvs which extended to the party line.
The defendant’s building, occupied by him as a home, was constructed in 1881, six years before plaintiff’s. It also stood about 40 feet back from the sideAvalk. The south Avail, that is, the one next to plaintiff’s, run back 76 feet and was about 26 feet north of the party line, or a little more than 80 feet from plaintiff’s building. This Avas the relative situation of the respective properties of the litigants at the time Hr. Mann entered upon the construction of an addition to his house, Avhicli when built had as its south Avail the one in dispute. This addition, consisting of tAvo stories and a basement, commenced 17 feet east of the front of his house and ran back only about 27 feet. It extended south 26 feet, 5->d inches, and onto the plaintiff’s property. In other Avords, the addition consists of a tAvostory projection approximately 26 x 27 feet, reaching from about the center of defendant’s building to and across the party line. To make room for the party Avail, defendant removed
Defendant predicates his right to appropriate plaintiff’s property Avithout her consent, and build thereon, upon building regulations of the city of Washington made in pursuance of a condition in deeds through which both parties claim. These
Fourth: Appellant demies the jurisdiction of equity, especially the power to grant a mandatory injunction, in this case, and says plaintiff should be remitted to her remedy at law*. Wo cannot, assent to this. The' wall having been erected on plaintiffs land in violation of her rights, equity has ample power to compel its removal. Weeks v. Heurich, 40 App. D. C. 46, 60, Ann. Cas. 1914A, 972. In Haitsch v. Duffy, 10 Del. Ch. 280, 92 Atl. 249, it was said that “'a mandatory injunction may be awarded by a court of chancery to enjoin the continuance of an encroachment [ upon land] and compel a removal thereof” (citing many authorities), and added that the power to do so was “based on the peculiar nature of the right invaded and the subject-matter affected, viz., land.” (See Long v. Ragan, 94 Md. 465, 51 Atl. 181, and Herr v. Bierbower, 3 Md. Ch. 458. The defendant hero went upon the plaintiff’s property wrongfully, and, with full knowledge of her opposition, constructed the wall. Plaintiff cannot he forced to sell her property to him, but equity will compel him to restore the premises, as nearly as may be, to tlieir original condition. Tucker v. Howard, 128 Mass. 361. See also Lynch v. Union Inst. for Sav. 159 Mass. 308, 20 L.R.A. 842, 34 N. E. 364. “Whore one intrudes upon the laud of another, the latter has
The judgment of the lower court is right and is therefore affirmed, with costs. Affirmed.