Howell v. Goss

105 N.W. 61, 128 Iowa 569
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 19, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 N.W. 61 (Howell v. Goss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howell v. Goss, 105 N.W. 61, 128 Iowa 569 (iowa 1905).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

I. Plaintiff and defendant are owners of adjoining business lots in the city of Centerville. At a time when one Breazeal owned the lot which now belongs to plaintiff, he, Breazeal, and defendant owned a party wall between them, one-half of which rested upon the lot of each owner. This wall was 23 feet high, and 12 inches thick, for a distance of 19 feet from the north end of the lots; and from that point south 79 feet, 9 inches thick, and 12 feet 8 inches high. Desiring to enlarge and rebuild this building, defendant Goss found that the old party wall was insufficient' for his purpose, and he thereupon, under some sort of an arrangement to which we shall presently refer, tore down the-old party wall and erected a new, higher, wider, and. deeper one in its place. Plaintiff claims a right to the new wall as a party one; while defendant contends that plaintiff must pay his proportion of the value of the cost of the new one-before he is entitled to have his, title absolutely quieted thereto.

[571]*5712. Estoppel: ' burden of [570]*570Plaintiff’s chief reliance is upon a claimed estoppel, growing out of certain alleged statements made by defendant [571]*571to one Swearingen, one of plaintiff’s grantors. There is a sharp conflict in the testimony on this proposio x x tion, and as the burden is upon plaintiff to establish the estoppel, we are constrained to hold that he has failed on this issue.

3. Party walls: adjoining .notice. Again it is contended that defendant was under obliga- ' tion to notify the grantees of Breazeal, mediate and immediate, of his claim to the wall. This is not correct. No one was claiming in hostility to him,, and the wall itself, standing as it did, was sufficient notice to put all upon inquiry as to his rights thereto.

Further, it is argued that the statute of limitations has barred defendant’s claim to the wall. The new wall was built, as we understand it, in the year 1900, and it is manifest that defendant’s rights, whatever they may be, are not barred. But if wrong as to the time- when' the new wall was built, the statute has not barred defendant’s claim, for reasons which will hereafter appear.

U enlarging and dutíes^and joint3 owners, II. Plaintiff strenuously insists that, under the party wall statutes- as applied to the peculiar facts presented by this record, he is entitled to a decree recognizing his right to use part of the wall as one in common, without paying any part of the expense of construction or reconstruction.

Testimony was introduced tending to show that Breazeal consented to the destruction of the old wall, and the consequential injuries resulting therefrom, in consideration of defendant’s promise that he, Breazeal, should be entitled h> use the same part or proportion of the new wall that he had theretofore used of the old; while, on the other hand, defendant contends that the old wall was sadly in need of repair ; that he requested Breazeal to join with him in erecting a new one; that Breazeal refused to do so, claiming that he was financially unable to incur the expense; and that he, defendant, then proposed to erect the new wall at his own [572]*572expense, Breazeal, to pay his proportion of the expense thereof whenever he should see fit to use it.

The statutes material to our inquiry read as follows: Section 2991 recognizes the right of either owner of contiguous lots to build, if there be no wall on the line between them, a party wall of brick or stone, and to rest one-half thereof upon the adjoining lot, provided the wall is not more than 18 inches in thickness; and in such cases the adjoining owner is not compelled to pay for any part of the expense of the wall until he seeks to use it.

Section 2996 provides among other things “that every separating wall between buildings shall, as high as the upper part of the first story, be presumed to be a wall in common, if there be no title, proof or mark to, the contrary.”

Section 2997 provides that the repair and rebuilding of walls in common are to be made at the expense of all who have a right to -them, and in proportion to the interest of each therein; but every proprietor of a wall in common may be exonerated from contributing to the same by giving up his right in common, if no building belonging to him is actually supported by such wall.

Section 2999 in substance provides that every co-proprietor may increase the height of a wall in common, at his sole expense, and that he shall repair and keep in repair that part of the same above the part held in common. “ If the wall so held in common cannot support the wall to be raised upon it, one who wishes to have it made higher must rebuild it anew and at his own expense; and the additional thickness must be placed entirely' upon his own land. . . . The person wdio did not contribute to the heightening of a wall held in common may cause the raised part to become common by paying one-half of the appraised valúe of raising it, and half the value of the ground occupied by the additional thickness, if any ground is so .occupied.”

Section 3000 provides that every proprietor adjoining a wall has the right to make it a wall in common in whole [573]*573or in part, by paying to the owner one-balf the value thereof.

Section 3003 provides in substance that the previous sections quoted “ shall not prevent, adjoining proprietors from entering into special agreements about walls on lines between them; but that no evidence thereof shall be competent unless it be in writing and signed by the parties.”

As there was no written contract between the parties to this suit, or any of their predecessors in interest, the action must be determined according to the rules announced in these statutes. But this statute last referred to does not prevent the introduction of parol evidence in order to determine the applicability of the prior statutes. That is to say, we must determine from oral testimony: first, was this a party wall? second, was the wall rebuilt or repaired so as to bring the case within the provisions of section 2997 ? And if not, third, was there an increase in the height of the wall, so as to bring it within the provisions of section 2999, heretofore quoted. Parol evidence must of necessity be admissible in order to settle these questions.

* Without the aid of any testimony the wall as it now exists is presumptively a wall in common; but testimony is admissible to show that it is not of that character. This testimony shows that the wall as it now stands was built by defendant at his own expense, save as he used some of the material from the old wall. If what defendant did was by way of repairs or if he rebuilt the wall by reason of its defective character, then the case is brought within the terms of section 2997. But if, on the other hand, he merely increased the height of the wall and in effect used the old wall for that purpose, then the case falls within section 2999 of the Code. We have thus separated the fact from the legal questions involved, to the end that the case may be the better understood.

Reduced to its last analysis the pivotal question is, was the wall repaired or rebuilt by reason of its defective con[574]*574■dition, or was the purpose in view an increase in the height ■of defendant’s building and the old wall ?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Trust of Lunt
16 N.W.2d 25 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1944)
Citizens State Bank v. Martens
215 N.W. 754 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
Hruska v. Rate Estate
193 Iowa 588 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1922)
Hanson v. Beaulieu
176 N.W. 178 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)
Younker v. McCutchen
177 Iowa 634 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1916)
Pier v. Salot
111 N.W. 989 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 N.W. 61, 128 Iowa 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-goss-iowa-1905.