Gates v. Friedman

98 S.E. 892, 83 W. Va. 710, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 220
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 S.E. 892 (Gates v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Friedman, 98 S.E. 892, 83 W. Va. 710, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 220 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

Miller, President:

In ejectment, the defendants demurred to plaintiffs’ evidence, and upon the conditional verdict found by the jury1 the court found the law to be for the plaintiffs and pronounced the judgment to which, upon the petition of the> defendant Jacob Friedman, the present writ of error was awarded.

The declaration averred that plaintiffs on February 1, 1883, and continuously since then were owners in fee of a certain lot in the city of Charleston, bounded as follows t Beginning on Capitol Street in the center of the side wall nearest to Virginia Street, of what.on the date of said deed was known as the Courier Building; thence with Capitol Street towards Virginia Street, fifty-nine feet and one inch to the center of the side wall nearest to Kanawha. Street, what on the same date was known as the Rust Buildings thence with the center of said wall to the side line of the [712]*712lot formerly owned by Dulce Rowena Laidley; tbence with a line of said Laidley's lot to a point opposite the beginning corner; thence a straight line passing through the center of the side wall of the said Courier Building to the place of béginuing.

And it is further averred that being the owner and in possession of said lot and of every part thereof as aforesaid from the date of the said deed, defendants on August 13, 1904, unlawfully entered and took possession of a portion thereof described as follows: Being a strip of land and building wall nine inches wide adjoining the lot then owned by the defendant Jacob Friedman, and extending from Capitol Street aforesaid back along said Friedman's lot a distance of sixty-two feet, the entire length of plaintiffs' said lot.

So that what plaintiffs seek to recover is not the whole •of their said lot but only the portion thereof upon which it is alleged defendants had so unlawfully entered and were then unlawfully withholding from them.

The evidence of plaintiffs showed that they and Jacob Friedman derived title to their respective lots from a common source, namely, the Kanawha Valley Bank, the plaintiffs by deed dated February 5, 1883, the defendant Friedman by deed dated March 26, 1904, the difference in the time of the two. deeds being over twenty-one years. The deed to Friedman ■ covered wha.t is known as the Courier Building, the side wall of which nearest Virginia Street was one of the monuments called for in plaintiffs’ deed’, and the lot on which the same was situated is described therein as follows: Beginning on Capitol Street at the corner of said Courier Building; thence with a line of said building on Capitol Street about twenty-eight feet and one inch to the center of the side wall of said Courier Building; thence leaving Capitol Street and running from same towards Summers Street, with the center of said wall two feet ten inches to the line of the Gates Building; thence continuing said line back from Capitol Street following the center of said north-east wall of said Courier Building to the rear thereof, and further continuing said line nine feet to a ten-foot alley[713]*713way in the rear of the “Wood” property; thence with the said alley towards the Kanawha River about ten feet, to the corner of the old foundation wall of the Arnold Building; thence with the outside of said foundation wall towards Summers Street twenty-six feet to the corner thereof; thence with the outside of said foundation walls towards the Kanawha River to a point where^thc south side line so extended reversed to the place of beginning on Capitol Street.

The deed to plaintiffs contains in the granting clause this very important provision: ‘ ‘ Together with the right and authority on the part of the grantees to use the side wall of the Courier Building and the Rust Building adjacent to the lot herein conveyed as parts of the building to be constructed by said grantees on the lot herein conveyed.”

And the deed to Friedman contains in the granting clause thereof the following provision, which we think must be given special consideration in determining the rights of the parties to the present controversy, namely: “Subject to the conveyance by the party of the first part to A. P. and C. A. Gates, by deed dated February 1, 1883, of record in the office of the clerk of the county court of Kanawha County, West Virginia, in Deed Book 39, page 144, in regard to the east wall of said building and the rights therein granted.”

The present suit was not brought, as the record shows, until April 3, 1914, nearly ten years after the alleged trespass by défendants upon that portion of plaintiffs lot sued for. The act of trespass by defendants, according to the evidence on both sides, or proven by that of the plaintiffs and not controverted by the evidence of defendants, consisted in the entry by defendants hpon the top of said north-east wall of the Courier Building, an interest in which was conveyed to them as aforesaid, then a three-story building, taking off the top of the wall dowrn to solid courses, and then building upon the original wall, which was about eighteen inches, a twelve inch wall, on plaintiffs’ side, for a fourth story of bis building, leaving a clear space of six inches on Iris side of the wall, to the injury may it be said of plaintiffs in point of inside space and strength of the wall, if they should ever wish to build higher on their lot; also in digging down and ex[714]*714tending said side wall from the rear end thereof to the back line of defendant’s lot a distance of ten to twelve feet and carrying the same upon the plaintiffs’ side corresponding in width and height to the original Avail as built for the fourth story; also in occupying the AAdiole of the wall of the original Courier Building fronting on Capitol Street by facing the same with the same kind of brick used by him in rebuilding or repairing the same.

There is no evidence that plaintiffs Avere not fully advised at the time of the use defendant was making of said original walls and the way they were being extended and built up on their side of the center line. Nor was there any effort on the part of plaintiffs to explain their silence for so many years, after the alleged trespass by defendant.

On the demurrer to the evidence several points are presented. But the turning point, we think, is whether the .wall in question is or is not a party wall; if a party wall, one set of rules and principles control; if not, other rules and principles govern the rights of the parties. The plaintiffs contend that the wall is not a party Avail; that by their respective deeds each oaauis to the center line thereof, with no rights in the other to any cross easements or rights in that part of the wall beyond the center line thereof, and with respect to which they are entitled to be protected the one .against the other.

We have no statute defining or governing the subject of party walls, local or general as in England by act of Parliament, and in some of the states. Budall on Party Walls, (2nd ed.), 36, Ch. II.; Jones on Easements, secs. 635-640. Usually party walls are the subject of agreement, express or implied, between adjoining owners. Jones on Easements, sec. 641 et seq. For definition we find that the text writers and the adjudicated cases generally refer to the decision of Mr. Justice Fry in Watson v. Gray, 14 Ch. Div. 194, as follows: “ ‘The wrords appear to me to express a meaning rather popular than legal, and they may, I think, be used in four different senses. They may mean, first, a wall of which the two adjoining OAvners are tenants in common, as in Wiltshire v. Sidford,

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.E. 892, 83 W. Va. 710, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-friedman-wva-1919.