Metaxas v. Easton Publishing Co.

140 A. 603, 154 Md. 393, 1928 Md. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 3, 1928
Docket[Nos. 85, 86, October Term, 1927.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 140 A. 603 (Metaxas v. Easton Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metaxas v. Easton Publishing Co., 140 A. 603, 154 Md. 393, 1928 Md. LEXIS 33 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Oourt.

We have here two appeals in two cases in which the principles involved are the same and the facts almost identical.

The appellees, which have adjoining buildings in Easton, filed, in the Circuit Oourt for Talbot County, bills for injunction to restrain the appellants from erecting a building-on land contiguous to the east side of the appellees’ buildings, alleging that the land upon which the building was threatened is an alley which both appellees and their predecessors in title, have used for more than twenty years, in connection with their respective buildings, and that the threatened invasioln of the alley would work irreparable injury to the appellees. The Easton Publishing -Company also- claimed title in fee-under its deed to a triangular piece of land on which its *395 building abuts (so far as surface indications show, a part of tho alley), 2.4 feet in width at the southeasterly corner, running to- nothing at the northeasterly comer. The appellees alleged that if the building of the appellants were erected it would destroy the use of the alley as such, and, would take away the access to the easterly end of their buildings and would deprive them of light and air.

The appellants answered, denying all the claims and pretensions of the appellees as to any rights in the alleged alley, or that it is an alley, or that the Easton Publishing Company had title in fee to' the triangular parcel of land adjoining its building, or that the contemplated building would irreparably injure the appellees, and admitted that it had been the purpose of the appellants to- commence the construction of the building objected to, until enjoined.

On the day fixed by the court for the- taking of testimony, July 28th, 1926, the appellants withdrew their answers and filed demurrers, alleging as gro'unds of demurrer that the bill set up two separate and inconsistent grounds of relief; that it showed on its face that it raised a question of title; and that it did not show irreparable- injury to the appellees was threatened, and for other manifest errors and inconsistencies. The demurrers were overruled, the answers were refiled, and the court 'p-ro'eeeded with the taking of testimony as to the question of the character of use of the alleged alley by the appellants, to prove or disprove that the injury caused by the erection of the building threatened by the appellants would be irreparable; -and the court thereupon passed an order continuing the injunction until dissolved by order of the court, and “further ordered that said writ of injunction shall not prohibit or restrain the defendants, Peter Metaxas, John S. Grouzes and J. Russell Summers, or any of them, from instituting and prosecuting a proper suit or action against the plaintiffs to try and determine- the title to tho property.”

The appellees’ contention is that they have an easement in the alleged alley, by reason of the threatened invasion and improvement of which they would be irreparably in *396 jured. Ou the other hand, the appellants, Metaxas and Grouzes, coiutend that they have title to the alley and that the appellees have no title. The appellees applied for an injunction to restrain the appellants from proceeding with their building’. The court did not grant permanent relief, but did grant temporary relief, pending the determination of the question of title, and stayed any further proceedings pending suit to be brought by the defendant against the plaintiffs, the appellants cointending that, even if the court could grant the writ, it should be conditioned on the plaintiff's suing at law to test their titles.

It has long been held in this state that the writ of injunction will issue to restrain the invasion or destruction of an easement or right,of way, and that,, in the case of a street or alley, allegations in the bill showing that its use as such would be destroyed by the invasion are sufficient to show irreparable injury. In White v. Flannigain, 1 Md. 525, 546, this court said: “In the language of the authorities, it is irreparable mischief because it destroys it as a street.” “The rule has been repeatedly declared that where a trespass works a destruction of the estate in the character in which the complainant was entitled to- enjoy it, a proper case is presented for relief by injunction.” Oberheim v. Reeside, 116 Md. 265, 275, and cases there cited. The bills of complaint and the testimony taken show clearly that if the strip of land is an alley, and it is so alleged, then the writ of injunction should have been issued, and the demurrers were properly overruled.

With the bills of complaint the appellees filed as exhibits their respective deeds. The Easton Publishing Oompany’s deed was from Robert B. Dixon and others, dated March 28th, 1911, and conveys, 'all that lot situate on the north side of Dover Street, “beginning for the same at the southeast corner of the lot of ground owned by Robert R. Dixon, improved by a two'-story brick office building occupied by Robert E. Walker, and running thence with the north side of Dover Street, eastwardly thirty feet, more or less, to an alley be^ tween the lands herein described and the lands of Dr. W. S.

*397 Kelley (the alley in controversy); thence northwardly with said alley thirty-two feet, more or less., to the lands- of Charles C. Nickerson, the same being improved by a store building now in the occupancy of J. R. Jarrell and Company; thence with the said Nickerson land westward to the lands of the heirs of Elizabeth A. Lynch thirty feet, more or less; thence with the said Lynch lands and the lands- of the -said Robert B. Dixon thirty-two feet more or less- t-o the place of beginning. Together with the rights, alleys,” etc.

The deed to the J. R. Jarrell Company from William H. Adkins and Lillian M. Nickerson, trustees, is dated January 25th, 1926, and described the land conveyed by reference only to former conveyances.

The deed to Peter Metaxas and John S. Gro-uzes, filed as an exhibit to the Jarrell bill, was- froím James P. Elliott and others, dated January 6th, 1926, and conveyed to them as tenants in common, “that lot or parcel of ground situate, lying and being on the east side of Washington Street, in the town of Easton, Maryland, having a frontage oil said Washington Stree-t of twenty feet, more or less, adjoining on the south the property belonging to the estate of Charles C. Nickerson (formerly owned by Walter H. Thompson) and now occupied by The J. R. Jarrell Company; on the north by the property of Walter O. Hughes et ah, and on the east by the property of Robert R. Walker, together with an alleyway running into- Dover Street and lying between the property of said Robert R. Walker on the east and the property of the Easton Publishing Company and others -on the west.”

The parcel of land so described, as shown on the plat in the record, adjoins the northerly side of the Jarrell property, and the “alleyway” of Metaxas and Grouzes adjoins the easterly side of the Jarrell and Easton Publishing Company properties.

These deeds, together with the claims of title by prescription set np in the hills of complaint, do not demonstrate beyond doubt that all the rights claimed are clear and undisputed.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A. 603, 154 Md. 393, 1928 Md. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metaxas-v-easton-publishing-co-md-1928.