Nikas v. United Const. Co.

239 S.W.2d 41, 34 Tenn. App. 435, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 24, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 S.W.2d 41 (Nikas v. United Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nikas v. United Const. Co., 239 S.W.2d 41, 34 Tenn. App. 435, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 158 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

SWEPSTON, J.

This appeal involves the rights and obligations of the respective owners of contiguous lots arising out of a party wall agreement.

Complainants, Nikas and wife, own a lot at the southwest corner of Main and Pontotoc Streets, Memphis, fronting 44 feet on Main and running 110 feet along Pontotoc, on which is situated a three-story brick building and basement formerly known as the Longinotti Hotel and now as the Manhattan.

Defendant Liberto and wife own the next lot to the south which fronts on Main Street 56 feet and runs back 110 feet west to the alley behind both properties.

The predecessors in title of the respective owners entered into a party wall agreement as follows:

“This agreement made this 30th day of May, 1895, by and between James Longinotti and August Longinotti of Water Valley in the State of Mississippi, of the one part, and Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee, of Memphis, Tennessee, of the other part,
[438]*438“Witnesseth.:
“That whereas the said James Longinotti and August Longinotti are the owners of a lot of ground 44 feet front on the west side of Main Street by 110 feet back west to a private alley 15 feet wide, Memphis, Tennessee, being the same conveyed to them by Stacker S. Lee and the said Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee, his wife, by the deed to be found of record in the office of the Register of Shelby County, Tennessee, in Book 185, Page 36; and the said James Longinotti and August Longinotti are about to erect a building on the said ground forty four feet front on Main Street, and running back along Pon-totoc Street the same width, ninety feet, such building to be of brick and to have a basement and be three stories high above the ground.
“And whereas the wall of said building is to be 22 inches and it is desirable that the same should be located equally on the ground belonging to the said James Long-inotti and August Longinotti before described, and that lying immediately south of it, which belongs to the said Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee as the devisee under the will of said Stacker Lee, which is of record in the office of the Clerk of the Probate Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, and all the said parties agree that the said wall shall be so located.
“Now this agreement witness, that the parties hereto hereby consent and agree that the said James Longinotti and August Longinotti shall locate and build half the said wall upon the said ground so belonging to the said Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee, and do the excavation and other work necessary in that behalf, the said wall to remain there permanently as a part of the said house, and that the same shall be subject to be used and appropriated by the said Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee as the wall of and [439]*439for the use of such buildings or improvements as she or those claiming under her may erect on the ground aforesaid now belonging to her, and that when the said wall is so used and appropriated by the said Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee (or those' claiming under her) she or they shall pay to the said James Longinotti and August Long-inotti, or their assigns, the one-half of the value of the said wall at the time the same is so used and appropriated and that such payment, so to be made shall be a full compensation for the said one-half of the said wall and shall vest in the said Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee or those claiming under her the full and complete title thereto.
“Done in duplicate this day and year above written.
“/s/ Mrs. Lizzie Yeager Lee
“James Longinotti
“A. Longinotti”

Pursuant to said agreement, the existing building was erected with the south wall twenty two inches thick at ground level resting half on each lot.

Omitting for the present intervening matters, after defendants acquired their lot, they began construction of a building on it and tied into the south side of the party wall for the north wall of their building, all without notice to complainants.

This suit was then filed to enforce payment for one-half the present value of the party wall.

Omitting certain steps not now relevant, defendants answered that in the year 1900 Joseph A. Bailey and George E. Witt, one of their predecessors in title, erected on said lot a one story building in which they used and appropriated said party wall as their north wall, attaching to same the supporting rafters and roof and using the chimneys built into said wall, which building remained unaltered until demolished in 1940.

[440]*440Further, that said party wall agreement was not registered until 1905 and that Bailey et al. had no knowledge of same and were not liable to pay for the use of said wall on their property. They, therefore, set up the following defenses:

1. The nonliability of Bailey inures to defendants;

2. Presumption of payment by Bailey after the lapse of 47 years;

3. Ten year statute of limitations;

4. Laches and estoppel by reason of the death of witnesses and by conduct of complainants’ predecessors in title;

5. The agreement was a covenant personal to the parties and not binding upon defendants, nor inuring to the benefit of complainants;

6. Only Bailey and Witt were liable and not any subsequent grantee of theirs.

Defendants then filed a cross-bill bringing in Ketchum et al., their grantors, to recover for breach of covenant of general warranty, in event defendants be cast in complainants’ suit.

Ketchum et al. answered that cross-complainants are charged with notice of the alleged encumbrance and that the wall having been used by defendants is a benefit instead of a burden; hence, no liability.

The cause was heard regularly on oral testimony by order (R. 45) of the Chancellor who filed an elaborate written findings of fact and opinion (R. 46-71) which we do not abstract as to all points, for the reason that we are of opinion there is error in one determinative finding of fact.

The Chancellor found (R. 51 and 61) that Joseph A. Bailey asserted he was not using and appropriating said party wall within the sense of the said agreement; hence, [441]*441since Bailey was and wonld be estopped to say later that be was nsing it, bis successors in title would be estopped (B, 62).

No fault can be found with his conclusion of law, but we do not think the record sustains the factual major premise.

The only testimony on the point is that of Will Long-inotti, son of August and nephew of James, who executed the agreement with Mrs. Lee. He was 16 at the time the Bailey building was constructed in 1900'.

As to Bailey it will be observed that witness never talked to Bailey, his father did not state what Bailey’s attitude was, and it does not appear that anybody talked to Bailey.

The testimony is:

“Q. Did you ever discuss that with your father? A. No sir, only once I asked him after I read the agreement did he ever try to collect on the wall from Bailey and he said no, he didn’t want to go into court or have a law suit about it.
‘ ‘ Q. Did he say the people who owned the other building had refused to pay?' A.

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298 S.W.2d 28 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 S.W.2d 41, 34 Tenn. App. 435, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nikas-v-united-const-co-tennctapp-1950.