55 A. 168 | Conn. | 1903
The plaintiff owns certain land, which is substantially covered by the waters of the Norwalk River. The defendants own adjoining land on the river bank, having a brick building upon it extending to the boundary line. To this building they have attached a wooden structure, supported by beams resting on its foundation walls, which is ten feet wide and nineteen feet deep, and projects over the plaintiff's land without touching it. The plaintiff's title rests on a conveyance made after this structure was completed. It has requested the defendants, who are occupying it by tenants as part of a store, to remove it, and they have refused. It desires to build on its premises, and this structure prevents it from doing so, and interferes with its use of its land.
The complaint states substantially this case, and has been found true.
It is contended that the conveyance to the plaintiff was void, because given when its grantor was ousted of possession. General Statutes, Rev. 1902, § 4042. The Court of Common Pleas properly held that the possession of the projecting structure at that time by the defendants was no interference with the possession by the plaintiff's grantor of the *664
premises over which it projected. The construction and maintenance of such a structure, like the construction and maintenance upon a house of eaves overhanging another's land, is an invasion of right, but not an ouster of possession.Randall v. Sanderson,
It follows that equitable relief was properly claimed and granted. While the plaintiff might have itself removed the nuisance, without appealing to the courts, it was not restricted to reliance upon self-help. Nor had it only a right of action for damages. An injunction might originally have been brought by the plaintiff's grantor to prevent the construction of the projection. This not having been done, the plaintiff could ask for a mandatory injunction to prevent its wrongful continuance.
It is found that the defendants made this addition to their building without knowing that they had a right to do so, and in order to provoke a determination of that question by legal proceedings. While this absence of a direct claim of right might be material, were the question one as to their having gained an easement by an adverse user for fifteen years, it does not affect the plaintiff's cause of action in this proceeding. They cannot defend on the ground that they did not in fact make a claim which it would be naturally inferred from their acts that they were making.
There is no merit in the exceptions taken to the finding.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.