This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a final decree after confirmation of a master’s report.
Findings by the master, succinctly stated, were that the plaintiff is the owner of a parcel of land with a frontage of twenty feet on Fleet Street, in the city of Boston, with side lines of thirty-three feet; that a building erected in 1849 now occupies the entire lot; that the defendants Costa, hereinafter called the defendants, own a lot of land on North Street, in the city of Boston, which abuts on the rear line of the plaintiff’s lot; and that the plaintiff’s title does not extend to or cover any part of the defendants’ land, upon which the defendants are erecting a new brick building in place of an old building.
Further findings by the master were in substance that the defendants have title to the premises in the rear of the plaintiff’s lot up to the face of the rear wall on the plaintiff’s premises; and that the defendants, in the process of excavating for their new building, undermined the rear wall foundation of the plaintiff’s building, entered upon
St. 1907, c. 550, relative to the construction, alteration and maintenance of buildings in the city of Boston, provides in § 19: “All excavations shall so be protected, by sheet piling if necessary, by the persons causing- the same to be made, that the adjoining soil shall not cave in by reason of its own weight. It shall be the duty of the owner of every building to furnish, or cause to be furnished, such support that his building shall not be endangered by any excavation: provided, that the owner of any building which is endangered by an excavation carried by an adjoining owner more than ten feet below the grade of the street may recover the expense so caused of supporting such building from the persons causing such excavation to be
At common law, as seen in this Commonwealth, if an owner of land makes an excavation in it so near the adjoining land of another proprietor that the soil of the latter breaks and falls into the pit he is liable for the injury done to the soil, but in the absence of negligence in the execution of the work the excavating owner is not responsible for injury to the buildings which have been placed upon the land. Foley v. Wyeth, 2 Allen, 131, 132. Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199. In Regan v. Keyes, 204 Mass. 294, 302, it is said “. . . an excavation for a city building . . . always goes beyond the line to which the owner is confined by the law of lateral support, and the neighbor's land in the ordinary case has to be protected in some way. It is this practical view of the situation which has led to the statute . . . requiring one who makes an excavation ten feet or more below the grade of the street to bear the expense of supporting the wall, if there be one, on the adjoining land.” In the case at bar the master states that “There was contradictory evidence as to whether or not the petitioner [plaintiff] had orally agreed to pay to the Costas the sum which they had agreed to pay the contractor for the work on the Triulzi wall and foundation”; and upon all the evidence he found that “there was no express contract between the petitioner [plaintiff] and the Costas to pay for this work.”
He found that the excavation on the Costa property was over ten- feet in depth below the grade of Fleet Street in front of the Triulzi property, but was nine and one half feet below the grade of North Street. It is obvious that the issue, whether the defendants on their answer are entitled to recover of the plaintiff the fair value of the work of
Respecting the plaintiff’s claim that an injunction should issue restraining the continuance of a few bricks, imbedded in the wall of the defendants, which projected a few inches into the rear wall of the plaintiff, the master found the plaintiff suffered no actual damage therefrom and that he is entitled to nominal damages of $1. We think in the circumstances shown that an order for the removal of the bricks would be oppressive and inequitable. Curtis Manuf. Co. v. Spencer Wire Co. 203 Mass. 448, and cases cited at page 451. See Loughlin v. Wright Machine Co. 273 Mass. 310, 316; Gray v. Howell, 292 Mass. 400.
As modified by this opinion the decree is
Affirmed.