75 W. Va. 384 | W. Va. | 1914
This action is for the recovery of damages for injury alleged to have been caused to plaintiff’s building by the carelessness and negligence of defendant in the erection of a new building on the adjoining premises. Defendant brings error as to the judgment reached and entered against it.
As we perceive the case from the record, the demurrer to the declaration and the motion to set aside the verdict present merely the question whether one must, in erecting a building on his own lot immediately adjoining the building of another on an adjacent lot, exercise care for the protection of the adjoining property. This question, as far as it relates to the excavation of the ground on or near to the line of an adjoining lot, has been settled in Walker v. Strosnider, 67 W. Va. 39.
The facts in the case now before us are a little different from those presented in the case cited, though the just principle discussed and applied in the exhaustive opinion in that case seems quite as applicable here. As the facts are here, it may have been considered by the jury that the excavation which defendant made was not improperly, carelessly or unskilfully made. An old brick house was removed by defendant to make way for the new structure. Defendant did not wholly remove .the wall of the old house that stood immediately against plaintiff’s wall, it removed only the upper portion thereof, leaving the wall to stand about twelve feet in height. The two walls were founded on about the same level, just a little below the level of the floor of plaintiff’s cellar. They had stood there together since 1872. Originally there had been cellars under both houses, but defendant a few years ago had filled in with earth the cellar
But from the evidence the jury could find that defendant did much more affecting the lateral support of the soil under plaintiff’s wall. Defendant hung a thick, heavy concrete foundation for the bake ovens onto its old wall and, the stone foundation thereof. On this concrete basis it built up a new wall against its old one to the height that the old one had been taken down. Then the new wall was set back on the top of the old and was carried up to the height of the new three story building. All the weight of the new building and of the bake ovens on that side were thus thrown on the old wall, except wherein the concrete foundation that was hung to it rested on the bottom of the filled in cellar, a short distance
Defendant owed to plaintiff the duty to use reasonable care in so constructing its new building that the same would not weigh down the soil under plaintiff’s wall. Whether done by direct excavation or by something else, an adjoining owner can not deprive his neighbor of lateral support for the soil. Though one builds a heavy building on the surface of the ground, if he does it so negligently as to have insecure foundation,- and the pressing down of the same takes away lateral support from the adjacent land, there is liability. The principal of liability expounded in Walker v. Strosnidier, supra, applies.
The doctrine of justice contained in the maxim, “Sic %itere tuo lit alienum non laedas”, goes further in its application between adjoining land owners than that the one can not carelessly injure a building of the other by affecting the lateral support of the soil of the latter. A more direct injury to a building of the adjoining owner, done carelessly in the removal or erection of a house in juxtaposition thereto, certainly comes under the maxim. The wall of the adjoining owner above ground can not be carelessly cut into, or otherwise injuriously affected. Broom’s Legal Maxims, (8th ed.), 292. True, the one owes no right of lateral support for the buildings of the other. But if the one is about to remove an old building, he must observe the situation of his neighbor, and in removing the building do nothing on his own land
It is proved that plaintiff’s house was out of plumb and somewhat in imperfect shape before defendant began operations. But that did not relieve defendant of the duty of due care. It was bound to deal with the conditions as it found them, using reasonable and ordinary care under the circumstances to avoid injury to plaintiff’s house. Walker v. Stro^ snider, supra. The weakness of plaintiff’s building indeed prompted care on the part of defendant.
Defendant submits that it exercised all the care that should be required of -it when it employed for the work a competent and experienced' architect and a skilled contractor. But it appears that the architect and the contractor were merely the servants of defendant. It plainly appears that defendant actually controlled the manner of doing the work. The contractor and the architect only advised with defendant. It appears that the latter was on hand and in complete control. The architect made no definite working plans. Nor was the work committed to his judgment and control. He admits he never made an examination of the character of the soil used as a foundation. The contractor had no independent contract. He was paid by the day, doing the work as directed
The trial court properly ruled in the matter of instructions. The one given at the request of plaintiff and those given for defendant cover and properly expound the law applicable to the case as made. They correctly and fairly submit the issues to the jury. Some of those requested by defendant and refused were inapplicable; most of those refused, however, were in fact repetitions of instructions which the court granted on defendant’s request. When a great number of instructions are requested, as was done by defendant in this case, the trial judge may certainly weed out from them lengthy repetitions. As Judge Brannon said in State v. Bingham, 42 W. Va. 234: “A court need not — ought not to — give innumerable instruction's.”
There is no error. The judgment will be'affirmed.
Affirmed.