Bixby v. Cravens

1916 OK 406, 156 P. 1184, 57 Okla. 119, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 488
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 5, 1916
Docket6721
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1916 OK 406 (Bixby v. Cravens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bixby v. Cravens, 1916 OK 406, 156 P. 1184, 57 Okla. 119, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 488 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

Tams Bixby, as complainant, commenced this action in the trial court against the defendants in error for an injunction to prevent them from maintaining, and requiring them to remove, a fence erected along the north boundary of their property next to his. Cravens filed a disclaimer, and the Lesters joined issue. There was a trial to the court, and the injunction ,was denied. From an order overruling a motion for new trial an appeal has been duly prosecuted to this court. The parties were neighbors, and owned and lived on adjoining property near the end of Fourteenth street, between the streets of Emporia and Fon Du Lac, in the city of Muskogee.

The plaintiff’s cause of action as set out in his amended petition, upon which the trial was had, was as follows:

“That he is, and has been for a number of years, the owfier of lot numbered 17 in subdivision of lot 1 in block 226, according to the plat filed for record in June, 1906, in the city of Muskogee, Muskogee county, State of Oklahoma, which has a frontage of 265 feet, and that he has a residence on said lot facing in a south direction, the south side of said residence being 26 feet north of the *121 south line of said lot, and that he now occupies with his family, and has for a number of years last past, the above-described property as a home.
“That the defendants Richard A. Lester and Nell Lester, his wife, own lots numbered 15 and 16 in the said subdivision of lot numbered 1 in block 226, according to the plat filed for record in June, 1906, in said city of Muskogee, that there is a residence thereon, and that the defendants Richard A. Lester and Nell Lester reside with their family thereon, and have for a number of years last past, which said lots lie south of the west UO1/^ feet owned and occupied by the plaintiff, there being about an 8-foot alley between the said lots of plaintiff and defendants.
“That on or about the 15th day of May, 1913, the said defendants Richard A. Lester and May Lester maliciously, spitefully, and for the purpose of annoying the plaintiff and his family, erected a plank fence along the entire northerly line of their said lot and the southerly line of the alley between the said lots of plaintiff and defendants, six feet high; that said fence was not erected for any useful or necessary purpose on the part of defendant, but purely for the purpose of annoying plaintiff and his family ; that said plaintiff has a beautiful home, and said fence presents an unsightly appearance on the side facing said home; that said fence cuts off plaintiff’s view, and also cuts off the air and light from the plaintiff’s premises, and greatly damages the plaintiff in the value of his said property; that said fence is a great annoyance to the plaintiff and his family, and not only cuts off the air and light, but shuts out the view from said premises of plaintiff south and southwest, and greatly detracts from the appearance of plaintiff’s said premises; that plaintiff has no complete and adequate remedy at law; and that, unless this court interferes by injunction, he will suffer great and irreparable injury.
“Wherefore he prays that on a final hearing of this cause he may have a decree enjoining the defendants, their *122 agents and servants, from maintaining said fence and requiring them to tear down and remove the same and every foot thereof, and he prays for all further equitable and general relief.”

The Lesters answered, admitting the ownership of the property and its occupancy as a home as alleged in the petition, and, further answering, denied each and every allegation in the petition made, and prayed for judgment.

The plaintiff testified in support of the averments made in the petition that his lot had a frontage on the south of 225 feet, ■ and that his dwelling house was located back from the street line 26 feet, and fronted on Fourteenth street, which street ended at his property line, and that he had donated to the public an alleyway leading to the right and on to the left, and these alleyways were eight feet in width, and unpaved; that he had a very desirable property and comfortable house, and had spent much time and labor in the improvement and decoration of his grounds with shrubbery and flowers and walks and driveways ; and that the Lesters had erected a tight-board fence six feet high on their ground along the alleywlay between the two properties; that this fence was constructed of plain pine boards, and 2x4’s, with the rough side toward plaintiff’s house; that the smooth side of the boards were inside and painted white, while the side towards plaintiff’s place was unpainted and bare and unsightly, and cut off the view of his shrubbery, along the west of his ground, and that the fence wias erected on account of spite, and not for any useful purpose; that the maintenance of the fence was not only an annoyance to him and his family, but depreciated the value of his property. Witnesses were called in his behalf, who corroborated his testimony. Lester testified that he had no personal acquaintance with their neigh *123 bor, Bixby, and that he had never spoken to him, and had no desire to harrass or, annoy him, and did not think about Bixby when he built the fence, but built it for his own convenience, entirely upon his own ground, and to protect his own property and its privacy; that the fence was five feet and nine inches above the sidewalk, and was built from new No. 2 pine lumber; that the alleyway along which this fence was erected was only 15 feet distant from his dining room window, and that the alleyway was a public thoroughfare much traveled by ice wagons, grocers’ deliveries, and by negroes afoot going to the negro settlement out beyond Fon Du Lac, and that the privacy of his home was exposed to the gaze and view of the persons passing through the alley, and by persons cutting across his yard before the fence was erected; that the traffic through the alley cut up the ground, and during dry and wlindy weather the dust blew into his house; that he kept in his yard chickens and pigeons, and a bulldog, and also cultivated therein flowers; and that the fence was erected in the manner it was for his own convenience and protection entirely, and to guard against the dust from the alley and to cut off the view of complainant’s garden and cow and the droppings from his cow shed. The testimony was supported by that of other witnesses called on behalf of the defendants in error.

It is urged in the plaintiff in error’s brief in support of this cause of action in part as follows:

“He was beautifying his yard and making a park out of it, and while this was going on his neighbor erected this, unsightly fence (unsightly on plaintiff’s side, but not so on defendant’s side), which is the first thing to greet him in the morning, and the recollection of which stays with him after he retires at night. 'It was the contrast *124 between the appearance of plaintiff’s side of this fence and ■the surroundings that caused it to be placed there, and it was this idea that caused such glee on the part of Mrs. Lester and prompted her to say from an overflowing heart: ‘How are the mighty fallen?’ What explanation do they give to this act on her part? None.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 406, 156 P. 1184, 57 Okla. 119, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bixby-v-cravens-okla-1916.