85 P. 590 | Kan. | 1906
S. C. Strunk is the owner of lot 103 on Main street in the city of Wichita, and E. Mathis and others are the owners of lot 101, which adjoins it on the south. In 1888 the owner of lot 103 built a three-story brick building thereon, which he and his grantees have ever since occupied. In 1905 the owners of lot 101 asserted a claim that one-half of the south wall of the building stood upon their property and therefore belonged to them. Under color of this claim they were about to erect a building of their own upon lot 101, using for its north wall the south wall of the one already constructed. Strunk brought a suit to enjoin them from doing so, and upon a trial was granted an injunction restraining them from making use of the wall until they should have established their right thereto in a proceeding brought for that purpose. The defendants prosecute error from this judgment.
As the matter has been argued in this court some confusion exists as to the exact legal question involved. The defendant in error contends that, even if his wall stands in part upon the lot of his opponents, he has by adverse possession for more than fifteen years acquired a prescriptive right to the land actually occupied. This contention cannot be sustained, for there is nothing in the pleadings or the evidence to suggest that there was ever any intention on the part of an owner of lot 103 to assert a right to encroach upon lot 101, and the mere physical occupancy of a part of it through mistake as to the situation of the boundary-line could not set the statute of limitation in operation. (Winn v. Abeles, 35 Kan. 85, 10 Pac. 443, 57 Am. Rep. 138.)
The defendant in error further claims that the district court could not have tried out in this suit the question of the true location of the boundary because upon that matter the parties were entitled to the deci
The precise question to be determined, therefore, is whether under the circumstances stated the plaintiff, being in the actual possession of the building, was entitled to the aid of a court of equity to protect that possession until the right of the defendants should be established in an action brought by them. This question must be answered in the affirmative. The plaintiff for the time being was in the peaceful occupancy
The case of Echelkamp v. Schrader, 45 Mo. 505, is very similar to the one at bar. There a double house was supposed to stand so as to be bisected by the dividing line between two adjoining tracts of land having different owners, each of whom occupied one-half of the building. It was discovered that the real boundary lay three feet to one side of the middle of the house, and the owner whose holdings were enlarged by this discovery began to tear down the building upon his side up to the dividing line as newly located. The other owner brought a suit to restrain such interference with his occupancy. It was held that he was entitled to such relief to the same extent to which it was granted in the present case.. The court said:
“It is usual in cases like this, where the title itself comes in controversy, to grant a temporary injunction to await the event of an action at law to be prosecuted by the plaintiff. But here the plaintiff is in actual possession, and has been for many years, and is therefore not in a position, nor has he any occasion,- to sue. The defendant is the proper party to bring an action and test the rights of the respective parties at law. If he neglects to do this in a reasonable time, he will have no just grounds of complaint if the injunction is made perpetual against him in consequence of his own negligence.” (Page 509.)
The right of the actual occupant of real estate to enjoin interference with his possession by one claiming title is affirmed under circumstances more or less analogous to those here presented in the following cases: W. U. Telegraph Co. v. St. J. & W. Ry. Co., 3