Loughney v. Klein

221 F. 197, 136 C.C.A. 607, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1306
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 1915
DocketNo. 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 221 F. 197 (Loughney v. Klein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loughney v. Klein, 221 F. 197, 136 C.C.A. 607, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1306 (3d Cir. 1915).

Opinion

McPHERSON, Circuit Judge.

This dispute calls upon the court to determine how much the defendant below -is bound to contribute toward the cost of a party wall. She stands in the place of her husband, P. J. Loughney, now deceased, while the plaintiffs, Klein and Jackson, represent the interest of Henry Phipps—Loughney and Phipps having formerly been owners of adjoining, land in the city of Pittsburgh. The facts are not in controversy.

On May 15, 1901, Phipps was about to erect a building on his lot, which measured 72.41 by 110 feet; Loughney’s lot being about 23 feet by 110. On that date they made two written agreements, the first reciting as follows, inter alia:

“Whereas, the said Henry Phipps is about to erect on his own lot aforesaid, and along the dividing line between the above-mentioned lots, a brick building extending from Penn avenue to Exchange alley, six stories high, of steel, stone, and brick construction, the foundation walls to be IS inches thick up to the first story, and 13 inches thick from the first story to the top of the building.”

Thereupon the agreement fixed the location of the dividing line— “which dividing line shall be the center of said party wall”—and then went on to provide:

“The said Henry Phipps does hereby covenant, promise, grant, and agree that the said P. J. Loughney, his heirs and assigns, shall and may at all times hereafter have the full and free liberty and privilege of joining to said party wall of the said building, so to be erected by the said Henry Phipps, as well below as above the surface of the ground and along the whole length or any part of the length thereof, any building which he or they or any of them may desire or have occasion to erect on the said lot along the dividing line aforesaid, and to use and enjoy the said wall or any part thereof as a wall of the building or buildings so to be erected, and to sink the joists of said building or buildings into the wall aforesaid to a depth of 6 inches and no further.
“Provided, always, nevertheless, and on this express condition, that the said P. J. Loughney, his heirs and assigns, as aforesaid, before proceeding to join any other buildings to the said wall, and before making any use thereof or breaking into the same, shall pay or secure to be paid unto the said Henry Phipps, his heirs and assigns aforesaid, the full moiety or one-half (y2) part of the value of said wall, or so much thereof as shall be taken or used as aforesaid.”

The other writing, described as a “supplemental agreement to the foregoing agreement between Henry Phipps of the first part and P. J. Loughney of the second part, dated May 15, 1901,” added this provision:

“That in case the said P. J. Loughney shall at any time hereafter erect upon his lot a steel frame building, any additional cost that he may incur over and above that of connecting to ordinary brick wall in order to attach the [199]*199frame of his building to the steel frame of the party wall, erected by the said Henry Philips on his adjoining property, shall be taken and allowed as an offset or credit upon tile one-half (%) of the cost of the party wall mentioned and referred to in the foregoing agreement to be paid by the said P. J. Loughney for the party wall provided for in said agreement.”

Phipps put up his building, and 12 years afterward, in August 1913, Mrs. Loughney (who had become the owner of her husband’s lot under his will) erected a six-story steel frame building, and used the whole length and height of the wall above the surface of the ground. Below the surface, however, she only used “a portion of the area of said wall * , * * equal to two-thirds of the area thereof.” She agreed that the wall had cost Phipps $18,131.50, but denied her liability to pay one-half of this sum, averring:

“That for reasons unknown to defendant [the wall! was constructed by said Henry Phipps of sufficient strength to support two adjoining buildings of twelve stories or more in height, and so much stronger and more costly than a structural steel wall amply strong enough as required by law and as ascertained by the experience of architects and constructing engineers to support the buildings of six stories in height similar to the buildings now constructed upon and using said wall.”

She averred further that she was liable—

“for only one-half of the cost of a wall sufficient as required by law, usage, and custom to support two six-story buildings of the character erected by defendant upon her property, to wit, the sum of $5,279.92, and not one-half of the cost of such a wall as erected by I lenry Phipps, and not one-lialf the cost of a wall necessary to support two twelve-story buildings, that being the character of the wall erected by said Henry Phipps.”

She also claimed, and the plaintiffs conceded, a credit of $600 under the supplemental agreement for attaching her steel frame to the frame of the Phipps building, and a credit of $161.50 under the first agreement for the cost of so much of the foundation as she had not used. The single question is whether the agreements obliged her to pay more than the sum she admits to be due. The District Court held her liable for half the admitted cost of the wall, less the two credits referred to, and entered judgment therefor.

[1-3] In our opinion this decision was correct. The quest iou arose on the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, and in discussing the sufficiency of the affidavit and the meaning of the contract the District Judge (Thomson, J., whose opinion has not been reported) gave the following reasons:

“Pefendant’s averments that the wall was constructed of sufficient strength to support two adjoining buildings or twelve stories or more in height, etc., as above quoted, do not meet the requirements of an affidavit of defense. They are entirely too vague and general in character. If a different wall were erected than that called for in the contract, it was the clear duty of the defendant to point out specifically wherein the wall differed from that specified in the contract. Besides, as the parties specified the kind and thickness of the wall to be erected, it is to be presumed that they knew what they wanted and provided accordingly. It may well be that both parties intended that the wall should be strong enough to support a much larger building than that about to be erected. They may have been wisely providing for the future. In the absence of anything in the contract to the contrary, or any averment seeking to alter or modify it, I am bound to assume that the agreement in [200]*200relation .to the wall, its height, depth, thickness, and kind of construction, expresses accurately the intention of the parties in relation thereto.
“If this be true, then in what proportion were the parties to pay? Turning again to the contract, we find that Loughney, the adjoining owner, was given the free liberty and privilege of joining to said wall any building which he, his heirs or assigns, might have occasion to erect, with the condition, however, that before doing so he or they ‘shall pay, or secure to be paid,'unto the said Henry Phipps, his heirs and assigns aforesaid, the full moiety, or one-half part, of the value of said wall, or of so much thereof as shall be taken or used as aforesaid.’

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Bluebook (online)
221 F. 197, 136 C.C.A. 607, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loughney-v-klein-ca3-1915.