Rich v. Stephens

11 P.2d 295, 79 Utah 411, 1932 Utah LEXIS 116
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1932
DocketNo. 5096.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 295 (Rich v. Stephens) 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
Rich v. Stephens, 11 P.2d 295, 79 Utah 411, 1932 Utah LEXIS 116 (Utah 1932).

Opinion

ELIAS HANSEN, J.

This is an appeal from a decree and judgment made and entered by the district court of Weber county, Utah. Plaintiff sought and was awarded both legal and equitable relief. He secured a money judgment in the sum of $75 for damages to his building caused by water draining against the north wall thereof from defendant’s building. Defendant was ordered to provide the necessary means for preventing, and was perpetually enjoined from causing or permitting, the water which collected in the light courts or recesses of her building from draining onto and against the wall of plaintiff’s building. Defendant appeals from the judgment and decree thus made and entered against her. She claims that the trial court erred in overruling her general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint, in making various of its findings of fact, in excluding evidence offered by her, and in failing to find the issues in her favor and entering judgment accordingly. This litigation is bottomed upon conflicting claims as to the location of the boundary line between land owned by plaintiff and land owned by defendant.

There is no issue joined by the pleadings and no conflict in the evidence as to these facts: Plaintiff and defendant own adjoining tracts of land abutting on Washington avenue on the east side thereof in Ogden City, Weber county, Utah. Plaintiff’s land is in lots 3, 4, and 5; and defendant’s land is in lots 6 and 7. All of these lots are in block 12 of plat *414 A, Ogden City survey of building lots. Plaintiff’s land is south of the land owned by the defendant. More than thirty years prior to the commencement of this proceeding a substantial fence was constructed to mark the boundary line between the land now owned by the plaintiff and the land now owned by the defendant. Ever since its construction, the fence has been acknowledged as the boundary line by plaintiff and defendant and by their predecessors in interest and in title. During the year 1911, a part of the boundary line fence was removed and plaintiff built a cement copying extending about forty feet east from Washington avenue along the boundary line theretofore occupied by the fence. In 1913 defendants’s predecessor in title erected an apartment house named the Argyle upon the land now owned by defendant. The Argyle Apartment was so constructed that three recesses or light courts extended into the south wall thereof. These light courts or recesses were each about twenty-five feet long and extended back into the south wall of the building about four feet. They extended from the bottom of the second story upward to the sky. The water from the rain and snow which fell upon the bottom of these light courts drained off on the south side of the building. In 1928 plaintiff removed the cement coping which had theretofore marked the boundary line and erected a large brick building on his premises, the north wall of which was placed against the south wall of the Argyle Apartment and extended up four or five feet above the bottom of the light courts of the Argyle Apartment so that the water from the rain and snow which fell on the bottom of the light courts could not longer drain out to the south as it was wont to do. As a result the water from rain and snow seeped and soaked into the newly constructed north wall of plaintiff’s building. In order to prevent injury to his building from the rain and snow water, plaintiff caused a composition roof flashing to be placed on the outside of the north wall of his building opposite and running the full length of the three light courts. The water from the rain and snow, *415 being thus prevented from seeping into the wall of plaintiff’s building, leaked through the bottom of the light courts and into and through the ceiling of the bottom story of defendant’s apartment house to its damage. The composition roof flashing which plaintiff caused to be placed on the north wall of his building was destroyed by some one, and the water caused by the rain and snow which fell in the light courts of the Argyle Apartment again seeped into the wall and ceiling of plaintiff’s building. There is some evidence which tends to show that defendant’s agent destroyed the composition roof flashing. Other facts which we deem material to a decision will be noted later in this opinion.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover for the damage to his building caused by the water which thus drained against it and to enjoin the defendant from permitting or causing the same to continue to flow against his building. Defendant answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim against the plaintiff. In her counterclaim she alleges that the boundary line between her premises and the premises of the plaintiff is ten inches south of the south side of the south wall of her building on the west thereof and one and five-tenths feet on the east thereof; that the north wall of the plaintiff’s building is on her land; that by reason of plaintiff erecting the north wall of his building upon her land she has been denied the use and occupancy of her property; that plaintiff’s building has cut off the light and air from the Argyle Apartment — all to her damage in the sum of $10,000. That because plaintiff constructed the north wall of his building on her land and against her apartment house, water from rain and snow has been prevented from draining from the recesses of her building thus rendering some of the apartments thereof damp and unsanitary, thereby reducing their rental value — all to her damage in the sum of $2,200. Defendant prayed for a money judgment against the plaintiff, for a mandatory injunction requiring plaintiff to remove the north wall of his building from defendant’s land and *416 that plaintiff be enjoined and restrained from asserting any title or interest in the land claimed and owned by defendant.

Plaintiff replied to defendant’s counterclaim. The reply denies generally the allegations of the counterclaim. As an affirmative defense he alleges that defendant is estopped from asserting any interest in the land occupied by his building because neither the defendant nor her predecessor in interest claimed any of the land south of the south wall of the Argyle Apartment prior to the erection of plaintiff’s building. That plaintiff erected his building in good faith at an expense of more than $25,000, and that to remove the north wall thereof and erect another wall would cost not less than $3,000. That defendant is also estopped from asserting any claim to the land occupied by plaintiff’s building because her predecessor in interest brought a suit against the plaintiff and others to quiet title to a right of way in the rear of the apartment house now owned by the defendant, wherein it was alleged that the apartment house now owned by the defendant occupied the entire sixty-six foot frontage on Washington avenue. That in such suit the plaintiff appeared and' filed a demurrer, which demurrer was sustained and the suit dismissed. That because of such proceedings the boundary between the property now owned by defendant and the property owned by plaintiff was finally adjudicated and settled.

It is urged on behalf of the appellant that the complaint is fatally defective because it is alleged therein that the north wall of the plaintiff’s building is approximately on the north boundary line of plaintiff’s premises. Elsewhere in the complaint it is alleged that plaintiff’s building is located upon lands owned by him.

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 295, 79 Utah 411, 1932 Utah LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rich-v-stephens-utah-1932.