Haas v. Brannon

1924 OK 500, 225 P. 931, 99 Okla. 94, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 835
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 29, 1924
Docket13686
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 1924 OK 500 (Haas v. Brannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haas v. Brannon, 1924 OK 500, 225 P. 931, 99 Okla. 94, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 835 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, O.

This action was commenced in the district court of Ouster county, Okla., by W. I. Brannon, defendant in error, plaintiff below, against Leo Haas and I. G. Hanshaw, plaintiffs in error, defendants- below, to enjoin them from changing the front of a building located in lots 21 and 22, in block 37, in the town of Clinton, Okla.

The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendants, as they appeared in" the lower court.

The petition alleges that plaintiff was the owner of. lot 21 and that defendant Leo Haas was the owner of lot 22, block 37, in the town of Clinton, Okla., upon which a two story-brick building was erected, having a -joint party Wall and a joint stairway leading to the upper story, with a lobby 16x7 feet extending back from the store line of the building, one-half of which belonged to each of the property owners; that said building was built about ten years before the bringing of this action; that the defendants were about to tear down and remove a column, which supported a large span of the foundation of the upper story of' the building and were threatening and making preparations to construct a column in front of the stairway-and in said, lobby; that the tearing down-of said column would weaken said building.. and the erection of said other column would obstruct the lobby and stairway and lessen the rental value of *95 the upper story of plaintiff’s building, and would be- an obstacle to plaintiff in his business on the lower floor, and would give the building an irregular appearance and would change the symmetry and architecture of the same; and prayed for a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from tearing down and destroying the column and from constructing and building the proposed column.

A temporary injunction was granted by the county judge of Custer county, in the absence of the district judge from said county.

The defendants filed motion to vacate the temporary injunction, and, thereafter, Thomas A. Edwards, the district judge of Custer county, denied said motion and made certain findings, which are as follows:

“First. That plaintiff’s allegations and evidence as to damage to the building by destroying its architectural beauty and symmetry are not sufficient to justify an injunction or temporary restraining order.
“Second. That plaintiff’s allegations and evidence as to damage to his building by weakening, cracking and destroying the upper structure are not sufficient to justify the relief prayed for in the petition.
“Third. But the court finds from the evidence that the plaintiff has an easement over that part of the lobby in front of defendant’s store, and that defendant has no right to enclose said portion of said lobby which is admitted in the answer he seeks to enclose by the rebuilding of the front of his store as in the answer admitted without the consent of plaintiff.
“Wherefore, it is ordered by the court that said motion be overruled, and that said restraining order be and remain in force until this cause is regularly heard in open court of Arapaho at the next term. To which defendant saves exceptions.”

Defendants answered by way of general denial, and for further answer stated that they denied they were about to tear down or destroy any supporting column, or that they intended to have erected any kind of a column in front of the stairway, but only proposed to remove the column, whieh was wholly upon the property of the defendant Haas, to another point on the property of said defendant, as shown by plat attached, and to erect two additional columns at two other points shown by said plat to form a center entrance to his business room on the lower floor, and that said remodeling made the front beams supporting the upper story of the building stronger rather than weaker, and that said change would not damage the plaintiff’s property in any way or obstruct the use of plaintiff’s property in any manner; that the plaintiff was the owner of lot 21 and defendant Haas was the owner of lot 22, and that their respective store buildings were erected on the said lots in 1909 at the same {jme; that the party wall is half on one side and, half on the other of a line being the center of said wall; that there is an open lobby in front of said building 16 feet long, running with the sidewalk, extending six feet deep into the building and there is a stairway four and a half feet wide leading to the second story of each building, which stairway was owned and maintained jointly by the owner of each building; said lobby consists of equal space taken from said store buildings, the stairway entrance being in the center of the lobby; that the owner was the owner of said lot 21 when the buildings were erected thereon, but the defendant Haas became the owner of lot 22 by successive transfers in 1913; that there had never been a common ownership of the two lots since they were conveyed by the town-site company, at which time there were no improvements thereon; that there never had been any written agreement between any of the owners of the property, either as to the party wall, the stairway, or the lobby; that the improvements the defendants proposed to make would in no way hinder the plaintiff or obstruct his use of said stairway or the entrance to his building, as there would still remain an unobstructed lobby and entrance 11 feet long by six feet wide, extending in front of the whole width of said stairway, and the front portion of plaintiff’s store, the portion sought to be enclosed, is in no way necessary to plaintiff’s free and complete use of his said store and the common stairway; that plaintiff had no easement or right of way by grant, implication, or prescription over that portion of said lobby sought to be enclosed; that if plaintiff ever had a right of way or easement over said portion of said lobby in front of the defendant’s store, he is now estopped to complain of said actions of defendant for the reason that he stood by, without objection in any way, and with full knowledge of the changes that defendant proposed to make and was making and personally observed the changes being made by defendant’s workmen for a term of one week and until the front of the store of defendant Haas was torn away and new material ordered, and remained silent at an irreparable damage to said defendant in the sum of $200 and that to replace the front torn away would eost an additional amount of $200 and that by his standing by and acquiescing in said changes that plaintiff consented to the *96 change and was now estopped to complain at the actions of the' defendants,- and prayed that the temporary injunction be vacated and. the action dismissed at plaintiff’^ cost and for damages.

. The cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which is as follows:

“1. Said lots 21 and 22 face south on Frisco avenue, in the center of the business section of the city of Clinton, and lot 22 lies east of lot 21. Both east and west for more than a block business houses adjoin said property and face on Frisco avenue, with a sidewalk 14 feet wide between the front of the buildings and the curb line of the street, the street being paved with asphalt paving.
“2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 500, 225 P. 931, 99 Okla. 94, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-brannon-okla-1924.