Parham v. Bradberry

188 So. 298, 185 Miss. 402, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 161
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1939
DocketNo. 33679.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 188 So. 298 (Parham v. Bradberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parham v. Bradberry, 188 So. 298, 185 Miss. 402, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 161 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Marshall county, overruling a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction. In 1913 W. B. Bradberry, the appellee, who was the complainant below, owned in fee simple a lot and building on the north side of the public square in Holly Springs, Mississippi. This lot was 44 feet wide, east and west, fronting on the public square, and more than 100' feet in depth, north and south, and is described as Lot No. 5 according to the plan of Holly Springs, in section 6, township 4, range 2, west. In 1913 Bradberry caused to be erected on this lot a two-story brick building, extending across the entire width of the lot, 44 feet east and west, and 100 feet north and south on the ground floor; the second story was of the same *408 width as the first, hut extended northward from the front only 50 feet. The ground floor was designed for two separate stores, each approximately half the width of the building, which was divided by a 13-inch solid brick wall, which ran the entire length of the building, and the entire height of the building.

The second story of the building was designed for offices, to be reached by a stairway leading up from the public square at the front of the building. The prospective tenant of the store on the west side of the building preferred not to have an offset in his store. The stairs leading up to the second floor were therefore erected on the east side of the 13-inch wall. The treads of the stairway are 36 inches wide east and west, and it leads directly from the street to the second floor. A 3-inch rail up the stairway reduces its width to that extent. At the top of the stairs the hall runs north to the end of the building, where a window was placed, to afford light and ventilation. The hall is 38 inches wide, and like the stairway, is immediately east of the brick wall; and at the top of the stairs were placed doors, opening into the two suites of offices; and at the north end of the hall another door opened into a small washroom. The two doors at the head of the stairs provided the only entrance to the offices on each side of the hall, the brick wall providing the partition on the west side of the hall, while the partition on the east side was of laths and plaster.

Mr. Bradberry owned the entire building described above until June 23rd, 1919, when he conveyed the entire lot and building to H. A. Harris and Cecil Boss, the grantees taking the property as tenants in common, and giving a joint deed of trust to Mr. Bradberry as security. About the 3rd of July of that year Harris and Boss exchanged deeds, for the purpose of dividing the property in kind, the deed of trust to Mr. Bradberry being still unsatisfied. The deed from Boss to Harris, and that from Harris to Boss, both contained a provision with reference to the use of the stairway and hall for the benefit of the *409 offices on the west side of the dividing wall. Prom the deeds we quote the following, as bearing on the use of the stairway: “And a perpetual, permanent and continuous right of way and easement 40 inches wide off of the west side of the east half of said lot No. 5 aforesaid for a stairway leading up from the street on the south of said lot to the hallway for ingress from and egress to the second story of the building on the said west half of said lot, the said stairway and hallway to be perpetually kept open and free for use for ingress and egress by me and the said Hamilton Harris, our tenants and assigns, all repairs needed for the upkeep and maintaining of said stairway and hallway to be borne and shared equally by me and the said Hamilton A. Harris. Should the building on the said east half of said Lot No. 5 be torn down or destroyed by fire or cyclone, and another building be erected on the said east half of said Lot No. 5 the said stairway and hallway are again to be restored as the same now are, with like conditions for ingress and egress to the said second story of the said west half of said Lot No. 5.”

Both deeds contained substantially this clause, with the parties to the deed, of course, being reversed as grantor and grantee.

Thereafter Ross conveyed his east half to Leibson and Richardson, but at the time of this conveyance the deed of trust in favor of Bradberry was still outstanding and unsatisfied. Leibson and Richardson were afterwards adjudged bankrupts, and the trustee in bankruptcy conveyed their interest in the building to Bradberry, the two bankrupts also executing to him a quitclaim deed, in the year 1921.

The deed of trust to Bradberry, securing the purchase money, had not been satisfied, nor had the purchase price been paid, when Bradberry received the title to the east half of the building, and agreed with H. A. Harris, who still owned the west half, that it should be a credit on the purchase price which had been jointly assumed *410 by Harris and Ross. Mr. Harris subsequently paid the balance of the purchase price, and on June 24, 1924, Mr. Bradberry satisfied the record of the deed of trust; continuing to own the east half of the building, while Mr. Harris owned the west half, both stores, and both suites of offices being occupied by tenants, as they had been from the time the building was completed.

In June, 1924, Harris conveyed his interest in the west side to J. T. Wade, with the easement as to the stairway and hallway, as means of ingress and egress to the offices on the west side of the building. Wade continued to rent the west side of the second story of the building as offices, installing a motion picture show on the ground floor, without disturbing the offices above, or the stairway on the east side of the wall. Later he leased his side of the building to Barnett-Coopwood, Inc., who operated a motion picture theater, and who, in turn, leased the building to C. E. Westbrook,' by a lease dated June 7, 1938. By an arrangement between J. T. Wade and his lessees, Barnett-Coopwood, Inc., and C. E. Westbrook, the latter undertook to remodel the west side of the building into a more suitable place for the operation of a motion picture theater.. It was contemplated by them that the entire building on the west side was to be used as such theater, and in order to do this it was necessary to raise the roof of the west side by building the 13 inch dividing wall to an increased height of about 6 feet, constructing a roof at that level.

In order to do this it was necessary for Westbrook to obtain permission from Bradberry, owner of the east side of the building. He failed to see him in person, and requested Mr. Coopwood, president of Barnett-Coopwood, Inc., to obtain the permission desired. Mr. Coopwood informed Mr. Bradberry of Westbrook’s plan to cut the roof and extend the dividing wall to a new height in order to raise the roof of the west half of the building, and to flash the roof of the east side to the extension of the dividing wall, requesting his permission to carry out *411 the plan. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
188 So. 298, 185 Miss. 402, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parham-v-bradberry-miss-1939.