Ferrone v. Rossi

42 N.E.2d 564, 311 Mass. 591, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 752
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 42 N.E.2d 564 (Ferrone v. Rossi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrone v. Rossi, 42 N.E.2d 564, 311 Mass. 591, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 752 (Mass. 1942).

Opinion

Ronan, J.

The plaintiff brought this bill for a manda[592]*592tory injunction to require the defendant to remove certain structures which the defendant has placed and maintained upon the plaintiff’s premises. The plaintiff appealed from an interlocutory decree overruling his exceptions to a master’s report and confirming the report, and from a final decree dismissing the bill.

The following facts have been found by the master. The defendant’s premises are bounded on the northeasterly and northwesterly sides by the plaintiff’s land. The defendant’s building does not extend over the northwesterly boundary although the awnings when lowered extend a short distance over the plaintiff’s property. The position of two or three fence posts, which the defendant had erected in 1935 on her property, have become changed by natural causes and are now located three inches over the defendant’s northwesterly boundary. On the northeasterly or rear line of the defendant’s land the main building extends over the plaintiff’s land one inch for the distance of nine feet, and the ell of this building extends over the rear boundary for its entire length of nine feet, for a distance of eleven inches at its southerly end and for a distance of six inches at its northerly end. The northeasterly corner of the eaves of the main building projects over the boundary line for two inches. The easterly portion of a small shed, four feet and nine inches in length, projects over the plaintiff’s property thirteen inches at its northerly corner and nine inches at its southerly corner. The defendant, in 1934, built a concrete retaining wall, a part of which extends over the rear boundary, and the two abutments supporting the wall are located entirely upon the plaintiff’s land. The plaintiff told the defendant while the wall was being constructed that the wall “was wrong.” He said nothing more and took no steps to prevent its erection. The defendant acted in good faith and without any wrongful intent in locating the wall. The plaintiff’s land adjacent to the defendant’s parcel is vacant and is not suited for cultivation or pasturage and is of little or no value. The location of the existing wall could not be changed without destroying it, and the cost of relocation would be entirely out of proportion to [593]*593the benefit, if any, that would accrue to the plaintiff. The master further found that the damage to the plaintiff’s land by the encroachment of the defendant’s building is trifling and that the defendant had not trespassed upon the plaintiff’s land in putting on screens and double windows or in performing other acts incidental to the maintenance of her property. He also found that the plaintiff acquiesced in the construction of the wall. He further found that there was no excuse for the delay of the plaintiff in enforcing his rights and that the plaintiff was guilty of loches.

It is the general rule in this Commonwealth that the owner of land is entitled to a mandatory injunction to require the removal of buildings and structures that have been unlawfully placed upon his land, and the fact that the plaintiff has suffered little or no damage on account of the offending buildings or structures, or that the wrongdoer was acting in good faith, or that the cost of removing the building or structure will be greatly disproportionate to the benefit to the plaintiff resulting from their removal is ordinarily no bar to the granting of injunctive relief. Geragosian v. Union Realty Co. 289 Mass. 104, 109. Westhampton Reservoir Recreation Corp. v. Hodder, 307 Mass. 288, 290. A continuing trespass wrongfully interferes with the legal rights of the owner, and in the usual case those rights cannot be adequately protected except by an injunction which will ehminate the trespass. The rule does not apply in those exceptional cases where the substantial rights of the landowner may be properly safeguarded without recourse to an injunction which in such cases would operate oppressively and inequitably. Gray v. Howell, 292 Mass. 400, 403, 404. Triulzi v. Costa, 296 Mass. 24, 28.

The plaintiff’s land adjoining the defendant’s rear boundary is higher than that of the defendant, and prior to 1934 some old railroad ties had been used to furnish lateral support for the plaintiff’s land. The defendant, in 1934, removed these ties and built a concrete wall some parts of which are located upon the plaintiff’s premises. The dimensions of the area that it occupies upon the plaintiff’s land [594]*594are not shown by the report. It is true that while this wall was being constructed the defendant was informed by the plaintiff that the wall was on his land, but he neither said nor did anything more about it until 1938, after relations between the defendant and himself became strained, when he had a surveyor locate the two boundary Unes of the defendant’s parcel that adjoin his property. The attitude of the plaintiff with reference to the wall must be considered together with the other facts contained in the master’s report. We do not know what evidence was heard by him, but in view of the friendly relations existing between the parties at the time the wall was erected, the benefit which apparently accrued to the plaintiff from the construction of a concrete wall, the nature, character and low value of his land, the extent that the wall was placed upon his land, and the facts that his land was vacant and that the relations between the parties continued unaffected by the building of the wall, we are led to the conclusion that, notwithstanding the statement made to the defendant by the plaintiff that the wall was improperly located, there was no error in the conclusion of the master that the plaintiff acquiesced in the construction of the wall in its present location. This finding of the master does not purport to be based upon his subsidiary findings alone, and, the evidence being unreported, we must accept the finding as true since it is not inconsistent with the subsidiary findings. Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital, 301 Mass. 431. Zak v. Zak, 305 Mass. 194.

The site of the wall tiaight not have been entirely satisfactory to the plaintiff but if, for considerations best known to himself, he assented to the completion of the wall, he is not entitled, years after its erection, to secure an injunction for its removal and to impose a burden upon the defendant of destroying this wall and of building a new one in order to prevent the plaintiff’s land from being washed down upon her premises. Furthermore, the plaintiff cannot complain that the wall constitutes a trespass upon his property when it is plain from the master’s report that he consented to its construction. The plaintiff shows no right to have [595]*595the wall removed. Shattuck v. Gragg, 23 Pick. 88. Richmond v. Fisk, 160 Mass. 34. Lajoie v. Milliken, 242 Mass. 508. Tenney v. Reed, 262 Mass. 335. Weis v. Cox, 205 Ind. 43. Irwin v. Minde, 276 Mich. 616. Sharpless v. Boldt, 218 Penn. St. 372. Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Torts, § 167.

The question remains whether the plaintiff is prevented by loches from securing relief on account of the encroachments other than the wall. This was an affirmative defence with the burden of proof resting upon the defendant. Alvord v. Bicknell, 280 Mass. 567. Lowry v. Commissioner of Agriculture, 302 Mass. 111.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E.2d 564, 311 Mass. 591, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrone-v-rossi-mass-1942.