Five Twelve Locust, Inc. v. Mednikow

270 S.W.2d 770
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1954
DocketNo. 43890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 270 S.W.2d 770 (Five Twelve Locust, Inc. v. Mednikow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Five Twelve Locust, Inc. v. Mednikow, 270 S.W.2d 770 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing the cross-claim of appellant-defendants [771]*771Mary S. Dyer et al., seeking a mandatory injunction. Respondent Melvin J. Medni-kow is the record owner of the seven story Oriel Building in the City of St.' Louis. The other respondents, whom it is unnecessary to name herein, are the owners of unrecorded beneficial interests in said building. Appellants are the owners of an undisclosed undivided interest in the property lying to the east of the Oriel Building. The defendant owners of other fractional interests of the property lying east of the Oriel Building likewise filed a cross-claim against respondents, which the trial court also dismissed with prejudice, but those cross-claimants did not appeal.

The Oriel Building, erected in 1891, is situate at the southeast corner of the intersection of Sixth and Locust Streets in the City of St. Louis. It has a frontage of approximately 45.61 feet on the south side of Locust. The property of cross-claimants, with a frontage of 82 feet, 2⅜ inches, on the south side of Locust Street, lies immediately east of the Oriel Building. Both properties have a depth of 70 or more feet to the south of Locust Street.

On and prior to January 1, 1949, a six story building, known as the Hunleth Building, was situate on cross-claimants’ property. It had been erected about twenty years prior to the erection of the Oriel Building. As of January 1, 1949, cross-claimants leased the property on which stood the Hunleth Building to Five Twelve Locust, Inc., a subsidiary of the First National Bank of St. Louis, for a term of seventy years, expiring on July 19, 2019, for a total rental of $1,411,021.46, plus payment of all taxes, general and special. The lease provided that the Hunleth Building would be razed and a new bank building, to cost at least $750,000, would be erected on the property by and at the cost of lessee.

Prior to razing the Hunleth Building, a dispute arose between the ■ respondent owners of the Oriel Building and Five Twelve Locust, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the “lessee”), with respect to the rights of respondents and the lessee in and to the west wall of the Hunleth Building and the east wall of the Oriel Building, which walls were partially adjoining. The lessee filed a declaratory judgment action against respondents for the purpose of obtaining an adjudication of those rights. The dispute between those parties was settled by two written agreements and the suit was dismissed. However, notwithstanding the dismissal, the appellant cross-claimants (and the other cross-claimants) were permitted to thereafter file cross-claims against respondents, to which the respondents answered, thereby making up the issues here presented on appeal.

The cross-claim of appellants alleged that when lessee razed the west wall of the Hunleth Building it was found that the footings of the east wall of the Oriel Building encroached upon appellants’ property below the surface, and that the east wall of the Oriel Building above the surface overhung their property line in a “Leaning Tower of Pisa effect”; that portions of the east wall of the Oriel Building were only 2½ inches thick and some portions were non-existent, the owners of the Oriel Building having used the west wall of • the Hunleth' Building as a “protective facing”; that the overhang of said Oriel Building wall and the use of the west wall' of the Hunleth Building as a protective facing was unknown to cross-claimants until the Hunleth Building was razed; that the above and below ground intrusion and overhang of the Oriel Building “while adverse to said cross-claimants, was not open nor notorious, nor acquiesced in by them or their predecessors in title, nor was any authority in any way given the owners of said Oriel Building, or their predecessors in title, by said cross-claimants or their predecessors in title for such encroachment, intrusion, overhang or protective facing brattice use, at any time whatsoever.”

The cross-claim of appellants further pleaded that the intrusion and overhang aforesaid made it impossible for them to comply with their lease agreement with lessee or to require lessee to comply with its obligations set forth in the lease; that [772]*772the east wall of the Oriel Building, as constructed- and maintained throughout the years, was in violation'.of the building code of the City of St. Louis; that the intrusion and overhang .was a trespass upon their property; and that they were irreparably damaged unless granted equitable relief.

The prayer was for a mandatory injunction against respondents to compel them to “rectify” the east wall of the Oriel Building to conform to the building code and to remove from cross-claimants’ premises, at and above the ground level, the said intrusion and overhang, and for general relief.

The answer of respondents was an assertion of title by adverse possession to such portions of cross-claimants’ property as was occupied by the Oriel Building and a denial of the other allegations of appellants’ cross-claim.

The trial court found that the Oriel Building had occupied the land and space here in dispute since its erection sixty years prior to the institution of this suit; that none of the cross-claimants nor any of their predecessors in title had been seized or possessed of the ground and space occupied by the east wall of the Oriel Building within ten years prior to the commencement of the suit and that cross-claimants were barred from asserting any right, title or interest therein; that title thereto was vested in respondents by adverse possession; and that if cross-claimants had not been barred from asserting title to said ground and space, sti.ll they would not have been entitled to the injunction prayed because the cost and damage of removing the claimed encroachment would be greatly disproportionate to the injury, if any, suffered by cross-claimants.

It was stipulated that the fair market value of the land in question, exclusive of improvements, was $5,000 per Locust Street front foot.

To establish their cross-claim appellants introduced in evidence the lease agreement, numerous inspection reports, plats and photographs, and the testimony of several experts. There is, however, little dispute as to the fads.

In June,-1951, Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, at the instance of lessee’s contractor, made an. inspection of the site and condition of- such portion’ of the east wall of the Oriel Building to which it could obtain access. It found the wall to be a “curtain wall” comprising precast light weight burlap encased concrete panels, 1% inches thick, 24 inches long and 14 inches high, with masonry supports at each end thereof and four upright cast-iron columns in between and “supported by the steel floor beam and running to the steel floor beam above. These panels were plastered with conventional plaster on the inside. This construction apparently extends to the roof line of the Hunleth Building. The expanded metal lath and additional plaster is the result of later remodeling and alterations. Above the roof line of the Hunleth Building these panels were plastered on the outside with a sand cement plaster for the purpose of weatherproofing.” It further found: “In the absence of ties between the Oriel Building curtain wall and the Hunleth Building, brick masonry wall, it is apparent the curtain wall is self supporting, by reason of the fact of the clear anular space between these two walls.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.2d 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/five-twelve-locust-inc-v-mednikow-mo-1954.