33 So. 103 | La. | 1902
Statement of the Case.
The plaintiff asks that the defendant be condemned to tear down the wooden building erected by her on the lot adjoining his property in so far as it interferes with the light and view in and from the second-story window of his house, and that she be condemned to pay $10 a month from January, 1895, until she complies with such judgment, in the way of damages.
The defense set up is that the plaintiff is estopped by reason of the fact that he at one time brought suit to recover from defendant part of the cost of the wall, constituting the side of his house, on the ground that she had made it a wall in common, which suit was, however, discontinued; that no servitude of light and view was established over her property, or, if any was established, that she was not aware of it, and would not have bought the property had she been so informed; and that, as the owner of a lot .in a city, she has the right to build thereon as high as she pleases, and may use her neighbor’s wall, if it be not already a wall in common, upon paying half of its value.
The undisputed facts are that in May, 1884, two lots, B and A, adjoining each other, and owned in indivisión by the same parties, together with the improvements thereon, were offered for sale at auction, and were adjudicated, upon the same offering, lot B first to plaintiff, and then lot A to the defendant. Philip .Avegno had acquired lot B in 1822 and lot A in 1852, and both lots were sold by his executor, in 1862, to George Binder, who, in 3864, sold them to Mrs. V. A. Gautreau and Valentine Avegno, and the title was thereafter held by the parties last named and their transferees in indivisión. There is nothing in the record to indicate at what time the buildings were erected', but it is admitted that they were in existence when the litigants now before the court acquired the property, and it is shown that the building on lot B then had a window in the second story, which opened over the roof of the one-story building on lot A, and that the light and view therefrom was cut off in 1895 by an additional story superimposed on the said one-story building by the defendant. It is also shown that in 1897 the plaintiff brought suit, alleging that he was the owner of the wall through which the window had opened, and that the defendant had built against it, but refused to pay part of its value as a condition to making it a wall in common, and praying for judgment against her for a sum exceeding $100 on that account. To which, after certain exceptions, the defendant filed a general denial. This was followed by a trial, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff, but a new trial was granted, and the suit was discontinued, and the plaintiff thereafter, in
Opinion.
Counsel for defendant states in his brief that Philip Avegno built the house on lot B, and made openings in the wall, more than 50 years ago; hut the record is silent upon that subject. The result, however, is the same, for, in the absence of evidence as to when or hy whom either of the houses was built, or by whom the wall was paid for, and in view of the fact that the wall stands partly on lot B and partly on lot A, it will not be assumed that the right, which the owner of lot A unquestionably had, to make the wall a wall in common, was forfeited or barred hy prescription, hut, on the contrary, it must be assumed that he conveyed that right, with the lot, to Avegno; and, if Avegno had subsequently sold the lot without reservation, he would have conveyed the same right to his vendee, and could not thereafter have maintained the openings in the wall of his house on lot B as a servitude on lot A, either by destination of tbe owner or right of prescription, hut only subject to the right so conveyed. That issue was distinctly presented to this court, and it was said: “There can be no question of servitude in the case. The wall belonged to the owner until the owner of the contiguous tract should pay for the half of it, and this right would exist so long as the wall stood.” Lavergne v. Lacoste, 26 La. Ann. 510.
Nor does it make any difference • that in this case lot B was sold by Avegno’s successor in title before lot A, since, even assuming that the relation between the two lots had been established by them, “the destination made hy the owner is equivalent to title with respect only to continuous apparent servitudes” (Civ. Code, art. 767), whilst the “prohibition of building on an estate” is a nonapparent servitude, and, whether continuous or discontinuous, “can be established only by title. Immemorial possession itself is not sufficient to acquire” it. Civ. Code, arts. 505, 727, 728, 766; Goodwin v. Alexander, 105 La. 660, 30 South. 102.
Eor these reasons the judgment appealed from is affirmed, at the cost of the appellants.