Jackman v. Rosenbaum Co.

106 A. 238, 263 Pa. 158, 1919 Pa. LEXIS 391
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 1919
DocketAppeal, No. 33
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 106 A. 238 (Jackman v. Rosenbaum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackman v. Rosenbaum Co., 106 A. 238, 263 Pa. 158, 1919 Pa. LEXIS 391 (Pa. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moschzisker,

A proper consideration of the many important points involved in the present case requires unusually lengthy treatment; therefore, to facilitate a ready understanding of, and future reference to, this opinion, we have divided it into appropriate heads, as follows: (I) Statement of case, including contentions of parties, with positions of the court below in reference thereto and its final judgment. (II) History of party-wall system, and legislation. (Ill) Police power and eminent domain. (IV) Constitutional points. (V) Applicable general principles and authorities, with comments on merits of case and relevant legislation. (VI) Cited cases discussed and distinguished. (VII) Charges of negligence and defenses thereto, particularly, that of independent contractor. (VIII) Judgment.

i.

Plaintiff sued in trespass to recover damages for alleged injuries to the Duquesne Theatre, in the City of Pittsburgh, and other losses claimed to have ensued to him as a consequence of the removal, by defendant, of an old wall, belonging to that building, which ran along, but did not extend over, the division line be[163]*163tween the properties of plaintiff and defendant, the latter requiring the space occupied by the old wall for the purpose of erecting a party-wall for a large department store in course of construction upon its lot. De-' fendant originally contemplated incorporating the old-wall into the new one; but the city authorities decided that the former was not sufficiently substantial for that purpose, and ordered its removal, which was done by the contractor in charge of the erection of defendant’s building. Plaintiff claimed consequential damages only; he did not ask payment for the wall that was taken down, nor for his ground occupied by the new wall, nor compensation for material taken and applied to the purposes of the latter, — he sought to recover only for loss of rent and the cost of repairing and refitting the theatre. The verdict favored plaintiff; but defendant moved for judgment n. o. v., which was granted, and this appeal • followed.

The party-wall proceedings were in accord with the provisions of the Act of June 7, 1895, P. L. 135, and plaintiff neither alleged nor endeavored to prove defendant had not strictly complied with the law; but claimed to recover upon the theory that, while defendant had the legal right to erect the new wall, and, if necessary, to cause the removal of obstructions standing in its way, yet in so doing it became liable as an insurer for all damages, direct or consequential, caused by the work in question, whether through negligence or otherwise. Plaintiff also claimed in the court below, and contends here, that, if necessary to prove negligence, the evidence is sufficient to that end; and, further, that the defense of independent contractor is not applicable to a case of this character.

On the other hand, defendant contends that, In the matters concerned, it acted strictly within its legal rights, without negligence, and, further, if any negligence existed, either in the doing of the work in question or through delay in its completion, this must be at[164]*164tributed to and charged against the contractor, who at all times proceeded without supervision or interference on part of defendant.

In entering judgment n. o. v., the court below determined that the party-wall system, as established in Pittsburgh, rested upon the police power of the State, and “injuries resulting from the mere exercise of the right to build a party-wall” were “damnum absque injuria”; at the same time, saying, as to the allegations of negligence, “We see no reason why one exercising party-wall privileges......should be held liable for any damage resulting from negligence or delay where the work agreed upon is done by an independent contractor and is legal”; and holding, “there Avas no evidence of negligence or delay [sufficient] to submit to the jury; [but] if there had been, it would have been the negligence of the-independent contractor, for which defendant is not liable in any event.” Additional grounds for entering the judgment are also given; but, since the two principal reasons just stated, if sound, are sufficient in themselves, we need not consider the others.

The first reason in support of the judgment, that this is a case of damnum absque injuria, is, in substance, the court’s answer to appellant’s principal contention, which, before considering, we shall restate in the words of plaintiff’s counsel, as follows: “We contend that the right to erect a party-wall upon the adjoining owner’s land, being wholly statutory, is derogatory to common law rights; that such right is, therefore, to be strictly construed; that the statute authorizing the construction of such walls does not relieve the party building the wall from common law liability for damages; that a provision read into the statute permitting one man to invade another’s land without'liability for damages would be unconstitutional, as depriving an owner of his property without compensation and without due process of law, violating both the Constitution of Pennsylvania and the Constitution of the United States.”

[165]*165H.

To pass properly on the several points suggested by the .contention just quoted, it is necessary briefly to review the foundations and development of the party-wall system in Pennsylvania. As stated in a note to Bloch v. Isham, 7 American Law Register (N. S.) 8, 11, “The custom of party-walls, developed by time and regulated by various statutes, was introduced into this country ......by the first settlers in Philadelphia under William Penn; and, in 1721, the legislature of Pennsylvania passed an act......regulating in detail the whole subject of party-walls in the city of Philadelphia”; see also Hoffstot v. Voight, 146 Pa. 632, 636.

The Act of February 24, 1721, will be found in 1 Dallas’s Laws of Pennsylvania 152, 3 Pa. St. at L. 244, also 1 Sm. L. 125; and it will be noted therefrom that the meaning of the term “party-wall” is treated as then established, the statute merely undertaking to afford a remedy for the “diverse inconveniences, irregularities and controversies” which, as it states, “frequently happen in relation to party-walls.”

The origin of our present party-wall regulations was the great London fire of 1666. They are primarily designed to guard life and property; and the theory which sustains these laws, as police statutes, seems to be that, in thickly populated cities there is a constant menace from fire, against which they serve as a common protection: see Vollmer’s Appeal, 61 Pa. 118, 125 et seq., where Mr. Justice Read narrates the historical development of this branch of the law; also see Traute v. White, 46 N. J. Eq. 437, 441, and Gibbons on the Law of Dilapidations and Nuisances (1st Eng. Ed., 1838) 110. Another theory, suggested by the United States Supreme Court as applicable to this class of cases (see Wurtz v. Hoagland, part “V” of this opinion, p. 173), is that, in congested districts, such regulations serve the public welfare by providing a common, economical means of using adjoining properties.

[166]*166So far as Pittsburgh is concerned, the necessity for party-walls was recognized, and their regulation provided for, in the first act of incorporation, passed April 22, 1794: see 3 Dallas’s Laws 588, 591; 4 Carey & Bioren’s Laws 421, 423; 15 St. at L. 161, 164, in connection with the act incorporating the Borough of Beading, to which this Pittsburgh statute refers, the Beading Act appearing in 11 St.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A. 238, 263 Pa. 158, 1919 Pa. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackman-v-rosenbaum-co-pa-1919.