85 W. Va. 712 | W. Va. | 1920
The right to have the protection afforded by an injunction against the defendant Klein’s unlawful interference with the quiet enjoyment by plaintiff, a corporation, of a lot and building
The chief disagreement between the allegations of plaintiff’s bill and defendant’s answer is as to the duration of the lease term, the abandonment of the premises and the removal of the stock of merchandise. According to the latter, the lease was to continue indefinitely from month to month, and defendant insists that he did not surrender or abandon it on December 1, 1918, but left remaining in the building a material part of his stock of goods. The answer is silent as to the payment or tender of the rental due and payable on and subsequent to December 1st until after defendant knew plaintiff had leased the property to defendant’s competitor in the same line of business, when defendant offered to increase the amount of the rental from $30 to $65 per month. But as neither contract was in writing, the duration of neither term could extend beyond the period of. one year from the date it was entered into except by the mutual acquiescence of the parties. Clause 6, section 1, ch. 98, Code 1918.
Though it is true abandonment of rights under a lease depends to some extent upon the intention of the party against whom it is to be applied, yet where every act of his and his conduct respecting the premises leave no doubt as to the existence
Acting upon the assumption of a terminated right and abandonment of the premises by defendant, plaintiff first granted to a contractor the privilege of storing therein temporarily lumber purchased for use in the erection of a nearby structure. This privilege the contractor availed himself of until plaintiff contracted to lease the premises to E. H. Lopinsky, to whose occupancy and enjoyment thereof defendant seriously objected and undertook to hinder and prevent until restrained by the inhibi-tive process later dissolved and subsequently restored by the award of this appeal.
There is, it seems to us, no merit in the asseveration of defendant that he had not removed all of his stock of merchandise from the premises prior to December 1st, but had left therein a substantial part of the stock for sale by his employees, who were selling the same when plaintiff entered into the contract with Lopinsky. Such claim is merely pretentious. It has no
By every act of his until enjoined defendant attempted to prevent the entry of Lopinsky upon and into the property without the-slightest pretense of a substantial right to interfere with him, and these often repeated acts were of a highly vindictive character. After having removed his goods from the premises and in order to delay and prevent the occupation of the building by Lopinsky under his contract with the plaintiff, Klein made repeated efforts to resume possession of the building so vacated by him, caused the arrest of Lopinsky’s employees, agents and servants and their arraignment before his co-defendant W. S.
The charge of the bill, riot denied, is that the justice, Klein and Belcher by their concerted and fraudulent action will, if not restrained, persist in their unlawful efforts to prevent the adverse reoccupation of the premises, in which event liability will attach to plaintiff for the loss so occasioned its tenant; that the remedy at law is inadequate because of the uncertainty of the extent and measure of the damages that may ensue as a result of the loss and depreciation in the value of the more than $15,000 worth of goods purchased by the tenant for sale in the building during the current holiday trade season and their unfitness for sale at any other season of the year; and further that the remedy at law is inadequate to give occupancy to plaintiff’s tenant within a reasonable time and to secure him in the quiet enjoyment of the premises.
Jurisdiction in equity to grant an injunction against the commission of trespass upon real estate, though regarded as well established, is to be exercised sparingly and is confined ordinarily to cases where from the very nature of the property affected or the frequent repetition of the trespass the injury sustained is not susceptible of remediable damages and therefore the injury may properly be deemed irreparable. 1 High on Injunctions (4th Ed.), §697. The actual and threatened molestation of the free and quiet enjoyment of- property accorded by law to the acknowledged rightful owner or tenant evidently is
An “injunction may be dissolved in vacation by the judge of the circuit court of the county in which the same is pending”
We deem it unnecessary to notice, except casually, the objection that until Klein had purged himself of the contempt due to his alleged disregard and violation of the express terms of the in-junctive process, the court over plaintiff’s protest ought not to have entertained the motion to dissolve. Whether well founded or not, the contempt, if any, concerned only the circuit court of Wyoming County, and, so far as appears, that court has not taken cognizance of any-attempt to do anything inhibited-by the injunction order. Apparently the rule was issued by and
Decree reversed, Injunction reinstated and cause remanded.