Lewis v. Pingree Nat. Bank

151 P. 558, 47 Utah 35, 1915 Utah LEXIS 93
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1915
DocketNo. 2773
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 151 P. 558 (Lewis v. Pingree Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Pingree Nat. Bank, 151 P. 558, 47 Utah 35, 1915 Utah LEXIS 93 (Utah 1915).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The plaintiff, some time in the early part of 1913 (the exact time is not made to appear), commenced this action to require the defendant to remove the front of a certain bank building from a public street in Ogden City, Utah, on which, it was alleged, it was an encroachment, and therefore constituted a public nuisance, and that the same, by reason of its projection into the street, damaged the plaintiff in the particulars alleged. The defendant filed an answer, in which it admitted the ownership and construction of the bank building, and set forth that the building was constructed by permission of the city of Ogden, that for certain reasons stated the plaintiff was estopped to demand the removal of the building from the street, and denied that he was damaged.. Upon a trial to the court without a jury, it found in favor of the plaintiff, found that he was damaged in the sum of $900, found that the bank building, or the front thereof, projected into the street, and that it constituted a public nuisance, and, after entering judgment for the amount of damages found, also entered a mandatory injunction, requiring the defendant to remove the front of said bank building from the street. The defendant appeals.

• The bank building in question was erected during the spring and summer of 1912, and was completed some time late in [38]*38the fall of that year. Ogden City, in 1910, had a population of 25,580, and the bank building in question was erected on Washington avenue, the principal street of the city, and upon a block which lies in the very heart or business center of the city. Washington avenue is 132 feet in width from lot line to lot line, of 66 feet on each side of the center. The following plat will help to explain the questions involved in the controversy:

“B” indicates the bank building in question. “L” shows a portion of the property owned by the plaintiff, upon which is located a five-story briek and terra cotta building, the lower floor of which is .used as a jewelry store; the stock being owned by a corporation of which the plaintiff is president, while the lot and building thereon is owned by him individually. “II” shows a part of a hardware store adjoining the bank building on the south. The heavy black line indicates the line to which plaintiff’s and the hardware buildings now project into the street; the broken line immediately back of the heavy black line marks the true lot line. The squares “b” “b” indicate two concrete cubes faced with granite, which cubes rest on reinforced concrete footings extending down to or below- the basement floor of the bank building. These cubes also project into the street beyond plaintiff’s [39]*39building about 3.33 feet. They also constitute the bases upon which rest'the round pillars, marked “P” “P” on the plat. These pillars are about 30 feet in-height and about three feet in diameter. The pillars are hollow, and on the inside thereof are two concrete columns 10x14 inches, extending the full height of the pillars, which are shown by the shaded squares within the circle, indicating the pillars, on the plat. The two columns are constructed of concrete, which is reinforced with steel rods, and the columns also answer the purpose of buttresses, and these support and strengthen the east or front Avail of the bank building, which wall, the evidence shows, was made thinner and weaker for the reason that it-was strengthened and supported by those two reinforced concrete columns. Indeed, those columns are pi’aetically a part of the wall. The outer part of the round pillars is composed of fluted holloAv terra cotta “drums,” Avhich are placed one on the other, and which, after being put in place, are filled in with brick-bats cemented together Avith lime, sand, and cement. Between the two cube bases are four granite steps, leading up to the first floor of the bank building, which floor is raised above the sideAvalk possibly three feet, more or less. The heavy black line marked “e” “c” indicates the cornice of the bank building, which is. over thirty-five feet above the sideAvalk, projects into the street about six feet, and extends or laps over into the front of plaintiff’s building between the fourth and fifth floors ás shoAvn by the returning lines “e” “c” on the plat. A concrete sideAvalk is laid in front of the building, either twenty or tAventy-one feet in Avidth, marked “Avalk” on the plat. The walls of the bank building are all constructed of reinforced concrete; that is, steel rods of greater or lesser diameters are placed into the molds into which a mixture of sand, cement, and gravel is poured, and those rods thus become imbedded into the walls which are formed by the mixture aforesaid, and reinforce and strengthen them. The bank building is fireproof, and the walls thereof are practically monolithic. The small “av” on the plat indicates the south shoAv AvindoAV in the front of plaintiff’s building, and from Avhich he contends the Anew is obstructed by the north pillar of the bank building. The broken lines [40]*40leading in different directions in front of the buildings indicate various points from which a pedestrian passing on the sidewalk at various distances from the-plaintiff’s window will be able to see it and the wares therein displayed.

The cost of the bank building-, “without fixtures or vaults,” was approximately $60,000, and the cost of remodeling the front to conform to the mandatory injunction will, .as found by the court, be- not less than $15,000. It was also shown by the contractors who constructed the building, and who testified as witnesses for the plaintiff, that to remodel the front as required by the injunction will weaken the front wall, and will destroy or at least affect the architectural beauty or effect of the front, of the building. The architect who planned the building testified that, in view of the monolithic character of its walls and the manner of their construction, the building cannot be remodeled by removing the front and still leave it “as suitable as it now is for the work for which it is designed. ’ ’ This evidence is not disputed, and in view of the actual conditions prevailing, as disclosed by the whole evidence, it is not easy to . see how it successfully can be disputed. The defendant also produced the building permit issued by the city, by which it was given leave to construct the building in question. The defendant also offered to prove at the trial that there were a number of bank fronts and fronts of other buildings in Ogden City which project into the streets or sidewalks as far,, and in some instances farther, than does the building in question, and that there were area-ways and stairways and other like structures which were allowed to project into the sidewalks. This evidence was, however, rejected by the court; but, in view of the conclusions reached, the ruling becomes immaterial. We shall -refer to these matters again hereinafter.

The plaintiff produced evidence tending to show that his two front windows were well adapted for show, purposes; that show windows constituted a valuable and useful asset to any modern store building; that the north pillar of defendant’s bank obstructed the view of his south window and the wares therein displayed for sale from the passerby; that he and those interested with him and their employes had noticed [41]*41that articles displayed in the south window were frequently overlooked, when the same kind of an article was noticed in the north window by prospective purchasers.

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Bluebook (online)
151 P. 558, 47 Utah 35, 1915 Utah LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-pingree-nat-bank-utah-1915.