Fitzgerald v. Katzenstein & Wiener

5 La. App. 28, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 454
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1926
DocketNo. 2448
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 La. App. 28 (Fitzgerald v. Katzenstein & Wiener) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. Katzenstein & Wiener, 5 La. App. 28, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 454 (La. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff and defendants are owners of adjoining lots on Texas street in the business section of the city of Shreveport. In the year 1914 both lots were vacant. During that year plaintiff erected a three-story brick building on her property, using nine inches of the adjacent lot on which to rest a wall. •" Defendants subsequently became the owners of the adjoining lot and in the year 1924 erected thereon a brick building, using the ' wall erected by plaintiff.

The cost of constructing the wall erected by plaintiff on the line between the adjoining properties in the year 1914 was $3587.60. The value of the wall enhanced so that at the time defendants made use of it in 1924 it' was worth $7568.12.

Defendants having used the wall in 1924 without paying for it, plaintiff brought this suit for $3784.05, one-half the value thereof at the time it was used.

Defendants admit liability, but contend that they owe only $1793.80, one-half the cost of constructing the wall in 1914, and they tendered that amount, plus costs, during the trial of the case.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for $1817.82, which was one-half of the cost of constructing the wall plus the accrued costs. Plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court. That court found that the amount in dispute, after defendants’ admission that they owed $1793.80, was only $1990.26, which is below the minimum appellate jurisdiction of that court, and the case was accordingly transferred to this court.

See Fitzgerald vs. Katzenstein, et al., 159 La. 64, 105 South. 226.

OPINION

The facts in the case are not disputed. The plaintiff built a wall eighteen inches thick on the property line, using nine inches of the adjoining lot. The cost of construction, when the wall was erected in 1914, was $3587.60. In- 1924, when defendants appropriated the wall, its value had enhanced to $7568.12.

It is admitted that plaintiff made no demand for half the cost of construction at the time the wall was built. The filing of the suit', it seems, was the first demand.'

The question presented for our determination, therefore, is one of law, viz.; Are defendants required to pay plaintiff one-half the cost of constructing the wall, or are they liable for one-half the value thereof in 1924 when they appropriated it?

Article 675 of the Civil Code provides that he who first builds in cities and towns may rest one-half of his wall on the land of his neighbor, and Article 676 of the Code reads as follows;

“If the neighbor be willing to contribute for his half to the building of the wall thus raised, then this wall is a wall in common between the proprietors. The neighbor who has refused to contribute to the raising of this wall preserves still a right of making it a wail in common by paying to the person who has made the advance the half of -what he has laid out for its construction, according to the rules hereafter established.” (Boldface type ours.)

Plaintiff’s contention is that an adjoining proprietor who for any reason has not, contributed to the erection of a.wall built partly on his property must, in order to make it a wall in common, pay one-half, of the value at the time he makes use of [30]*30it, in case the wall has enhanced in value after its construction.

To so hold, we would have to read the above quoted article out of the Code. The language of the Code is clear and unambiguous. It provides in language too clear to be misunderstood that even though the adjoining proprietor refuse to contribute to the expense of erecting the wall he “preserves still a right of making it a wall in common by paying to the person who has made the advance, the half of what he has laid out for its construction”.

There might arise conditions and circumstances under which he would be. permitted to make use of a wall in common by paying less than half the cost of construction, as will be shown later, but under no consideration can he be required to pay more. The law specifically “preserves” to him the right to make it a wall in common, and the only condition imposed upon him for so doing is, that he pay to the “person who has made the advance, the half of what he has laid out for its construction”. He has that right without qualification as to the time he makes use of it or any other conditions or circumstances. He can never be called upon to pay more than one-half the cost of construction.

In support of their contention, counsel cite the cases of Augustin vs. Farnsworth, et al., 155 La. 1053, 99 South. 868, and Canal Villere Realty Co. vs. Gumbel R. & S. Co., decided by the Orl. Ct. App. in 1924.

In the case of Augustin vs. Farnsforth, 155 La. 1053, 99 South. 868, supra, the facts were that the wall was built by the plaintiff in the year 1920 at a cost of $4,936.50. The defendants began to use the wall in February, 1922. In June, 1922, the plaintiff brought suit against the defendants demanding $2,468.25 — one-half the cost of construction. The wall was not worth as much in 1922 as it was when built in 1920, and defendants contended that they were bound to pay only one-half the value of the wall as it stood when they began to use it in February, 1922. There was judgment in the lower court in favor of the plaintiff for $1,539.51, one-half its value at the time the wall was made use of by the defendants, and the judgment was affirmed on appeal.

The question in that case, therefore, t^as not whether the neighbor who makes use of a wall is required to pay more than one-half the cost of construction in case it enhances in value, but whether he may make use of it by paying less in case the value of the wall has diminished, and the court held that he could. After quoting Article 676 of the Civil Code, the court said:

“By the terms of this article, a neighbor must pay half the cost of construction when he has refused to contribute to the raising of the wall.* * *”

A similar statement of the law is found in Grailhe vs. Hown, 1 La. Ann. 140. The court said:

“By this last article (Article 672, now Article 676) it is clear that the neighbor who has refused to contribute to the expense, is bound to pay the cost of it whenever he undertakes to make it a wall in common. * * * If, when called upon, he should refuse to contribute, or pay no attention to the notice, which amounts to the same thing, then and in that case the law binds him to reimburse his neighbor half the cost, whenever he makes use of the law (wall).

“But suppose no notice whatever is given of the erection of the wall, it is clear that the claim of the party for indemnity for half the wall, must rest on general principles, and cannot be regulated by this article (Article 676) which fixes the amount of indemnity against the party who had' refused to contribute, and, by its very limitation, extends to no other cases. * * *.” (Boldface ours.)

[31]*31These are clear and concise statements of the law. It is true that in each of those cases the court held that the party-making use of the wall was hound to pay one-half of its value at the time it was used, but the walls had depreciated in value, and the court held in each case that because no notice had been given and no opportunity afforded to contribute the defendants were bound for only one-half of the value at the time used.

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5 La. App. 28, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-katzenstein-wiener-lactapp-1926.