Chase v. Hall

41 Mo. App. 15, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 245
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 41 Mo. App. 15 (Chase v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Hall, 41 Mo. App. 15, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 245 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Biggs, J.

This is an injunction proceeding to restrain the defendant from erecting a stairway on the outside of a building to the second or upper story. After a hearing of the evidence, the court dissolved the injunction and dismissed the suit. Afterwards, at the same term, there was, on motion of the defendant, an assessment of damages, by reason of the injunction, and final judgment was entered against the plaintiff for the amount of damages found by the jury. The plaintiff has appealed.

The facts in the case may be briefly stated as follows : In 1884, Jonathan Norris was the owner of a lot in the town of Seneca, in Newton county, Missouri. The lot fronted twenty-five feet on a street and extended back in an eastward direction one hundred and fifty feet. The adjoining lots were owned by other parties. Norris erected on the front part of his lot a two-story building, twenty-five feet wide and fifty feet long, and [17]*17the Masonic lodge of the town paid the cost of the construction of the upper story under an agreement for a lease for a term of ninety-nine years. The lease was properly executed, acknowledged and recorded, and, after the completion of the building, the lower story was occupied by Norris as a dry goods and grocery store, and the upper story was occupied by the Masonic lodge.. The plaintiff, at the institution of this suit, was the owner of the Norris title. The only way to or from the upper story was a stairway erected on the south side of the building from the sidewalk in front. This staircase rested on and extended over the lot of the adjoining owner. In 1889, the owner of this lot commenced a building thereon, and the lodge was compelled to remove the stairway. The lodge then sold and transferred its interest in the lease to the defendant, and he proceeded to construct a stairway to the upper story at the rear end of the building.

This action by the defendant brought about this litigation in which the plaintiff sought to enjoin the defendant from building the stairway upon the grounds that his action amounted to a direct trespass upon plaintiff’s property, and that the construction of the. stairway in the place and in the manner proposed cut off the light to the storeroom from the rear window, and thereby rendered the room almost valueless for business purposes. The defendant’s answer was to the effect that the upper story of the building was worthless in its then condition; that, as the owner of the lease, he had the right to erect the stairway; that the place where he contemplated putting it was the most suitable, and that the structure at this place would do the plaintiff less damage, than if erected at any other place available to the defendant.

Before we pass to the discussion of the merits, it will be' better to notice an alleged irregularity in the proceedings, to which our attention has been called by [18]*18the defendant’s counsel. Immediately after the dissolution of the injunction and the dismissal of the bill, the plaintiff filed his motion for a new trial, in which the attention of the court was properly called to the alleged errors now complained of. A few days after-wards, but during the same term, there was an inquiry of damages; final judgment was entered for the damages assessed by the jury, and, on the same day, the plaintiff filed a second motion for a new trial, in which only the errors complained of in the last proceeding were mentioned. Both motions were then overruled by the court, and the plaintiff duly excepted. It is now insisted by the defendant’s counsel that the first motion was inoperative, by reason of the fact that it was filed before the final judgment in the case. It has been held in this state and elsewhere that the mere- dissolution of a temporary injunction is not such a final judgment as will authorize an appeal; but this rule is not applicable to this case, because the entire proceeding was dismissed and the defendant finally discharged. If the defendant’s theory of the law should be adopted, then a plaintiff’s right of appeal in such a case would be made to depend upon the defendant’s action in moving for an assessment of damages on account of the injunction. The authorities relied on by defendant’s counsel merely hold that the dissolution of a temporary injunction, without more, does not amount to a final judgment. Tanner v. Irwin, 1 Mo. 65; Johnson v. Board of Ed., 65 Mo. 47; Witthaus v. Bank, 18 Mo. App. 181.

The first position taken by the plaintiff is that the defendant, as the owner of the lease, had no right to construct another stairway, and that, therefore, his entrance upon the plaintiff’s premises for that purpose was a trespass. We cannot yield our assent to this proposition. The lease, under which the defendant claims, was of record at the time when the plaintiff purchased, and the latter was bound to take notice of its provisions. When Norris made the lease he impliedly [19]*19granted to the Masonic lodge, or its assigns, the right to pass over his lot for the purpose of gaining access to that part of the building conveyed by the lease. The rule is that, if one grants a close which is inaccessible except' over his own land, he impliedly grants with it the right of passing over that land. Otherwise the grantee would derive no benefit from the grant. Nicholas v. Luce, 24 Pick. 102; s. c., 35 Am. Dec. 302; Snyder v. Worford, 11 Mo. 513; Goddard, Easements, p. 94. It is reasonable to conclude that the stairway constructed on the adjoining lot was regarded by both parties to the lease as a temporary arrangement, and that it was liable to be removed at any time by the owner of the lot. It must have been within the contemplation of the parties that, whenever the adjoining owner required the stairway to be removed, the lessee would have the right to construct a stairway at some other place. The value of the lease, under a different construction of the contract, would be made to depend entirely on the action of the owner of the adjoining lot. But the defendant, in making the selection for a new site for a stairway, would have to regard the interest and convenience of the plaintiff as the owner of the lot and the lower portions of the building, and the law will compel him to erect the structure in such a manner and in such place as will result in the least damage to the plaintiff’s property. Nicholas v. Luce, supra.

The evidence shows that the only light to the back portion of the plaintiff’s storeroom comes from a window located at the east end, near the south side of the building ; that the place selected by the defendant for the stairway was immediately in front of this window, and that the stairway was to extend up to a landing just above the top of the window; that the stairway, if built in this manner, would exclude the greater portion of the light from the back part of the storeroom, and greatly damage it for business purposes. And the evidence also tended to show that the superstructure of [20]*20the staircase would obstruct and prevent the use of a small shed room, located and attached to the east end and on a line with the north side of the building. This shed room was ten or twelve feet long and one story high.

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Related

Tanner v. Irwin
1 Mo. 65 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1821)
Snyder v. Warford & Thomas
11 Mo. 513 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1848)
Witthaus v. Washington Savings Bank
18 Mo. App. 181 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1885)
Johnson v. Board of Education
65 Mo. 47 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Mo. App. 15, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-hall-moctapp-1890.