Robeson v. Pittenger

2 N.J. Eq. 57
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 15, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 2 N.J. Eq. 57 (Robeson v. Pittenger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robeson v. Pittenger, 2 N.J. Eq. 57 (N.J. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The object of this bill is to restrain the defendant from obstructing the light and air of a building belonging to the complainants. When the bill was presented, I granted the injunction with much reluctance, without notice ; and I did so from the pressing character of (ho case, as the defendant was actually at work in erecting the very obstruction complained of. I am now furnished with the briefs of the counsel of the respective parties, on a motion to dissolve the injunction upon the case made by the bill, and shall consider the same without prejudice, as if the propriety of the interference of the court was now7 for the first time consider ed. 1 am not aware that this question has ever been decided in New-Jersey, and it has caused me some anxiety to determine, not so much what views have been taken by other judges and in other countries, of the question, but what should be the course of decision in this state, and particularly in a country under a rapidly increasing state of improve[62]*62ment. It would seem unreasonable, that in those places where land is cheap, and the country thinly settled, a party, after being permitted to build his house and place his windows on the side adjoining the open field of another man, and especially after so long a possession as to presume a grant for that purpose, should have them obstructed by the erection of a wall or another building, when perhaps a little accommodation, by placing the new building a few feet further off, might work no injury to any body; and yet iu populous cities, where land is very valuable, and it is the constant practice to place buildings side by side, the enforcement of the same rule might work great inconvenience and injustice. The difficulty, therefore, is to lay down one rule for all cases. Nor will it do to leave all parties to their remedy at law. That would be shutting up the doors of a court of equity, when the exercise of its legitimate powers is most needed. Cases might arise where damages would be no adequate compensation for the injury sustained, and the party unable to respond in damages at all.

The cases in the English courts are numerous, in which damages at law have been recovered for obstructing lights, and where injunctions have been issued to prevent such obstructions. The law is there well settled, and of long standing. In 1 Levinz’ Rep. 122, the case of Palmer v. Fletcher, there is an early and important decision on this subject. This was a case at law. A man built a house on his own lands, and then sold the house to one man, and the land adjoining to another, who obstructed the windows of the house by piles of timber. This house had been recently built, yet the action was sustained. The judges differed as to what would have been the result had the man sold the vacant lot first, seeing the building had been recently erected: but all agreed, that if a stranger had owned the adjoining lands, he might obstruct the lights of a newly erected building, but not of an ancient building so that he has gained a right in the lights by prescription.

In 1 Comyn’s Digest, title, “Action on the Case for a Nuisance," A., the cases are cited in which actions on the case for a [63]*63nuisance have been allowed. If a man erect a house or mill to the nuisance of another, every occupier afterwards is subject to an action for the nuisance.

In the case of Rosewell v. Pryor, 6 Modern, 116, the question was, whether in a declaration for stopping the plaintiff’s lights,' it was necessary to state the lights and the messuage as being ancient, and it was held not to be necessary. In that case, Holt, chief justice, says : i! If a man have a vacant piece of ground, and build thereupon, and that house has very good lights, and he lets ti lis house to another, and after he builds upon a contiguous piece of ground, or lets the ground contiguous to another, who builds thereupon to the nuisance of the lights of the first house, the lessee of the first house shall have an action upon the case against such builder, for the first house was granted to him with all the easements and the lights then belonging to it.”

This general principle is also staled in 3 Bl. Com. 217, where it is declared to be essential to the maintenance of the action, that the windows he ancient. The English cases are uniform on this subject; and chancellor Kent, in 3 Kents Com. 445, declares in general terms, that “ according to the English law, the owner of a house will be restrained by injunction, and he will be liable to an action on the case, if he makes any erections or improvements, so as to obstruct the ancient lights of an adjoining house.”

In our own country, too, the same doctrines have been maintained : and I do not perceive that chancellor Kent, in his Commentaries above referred to, denies any where that the same rules of law on this subject apply in this country, except in a note, where he declares, that this common law prescription does not reasonably or equitably apply to buildings on narrow lots in the rapidly growing cities in this country, and upon the ground, that such was not the presumed intention of the owners of such lots. From all he says, f infer that he recognizes the general principles before stated as in force in this country, but exempts the case of city lots, from the necessity and reason of the thing, as necessary for their advancement and continued improvement.

[64]*64The case of Story v. Odin, in 12 Mass. 157, is a very clear and plain decision in our own courts. The property was situated in the town of Boston. The building was purchased of the town in 1795, and stood adjoining other lands of the town, with •lights looking out directly upon this vacant land. In 1812, the town sold this vacant lot, and the- purchaser built- directly adjoining the plaintiff’s building, and obstructed his lights. The court decided, that as the purchaser of the first building bought without reserving to the grantors any right to build on the adjoining ground so as to interfere with his lights, they could not, nor could their grantees, build so as to interfere with this right.

As to the proper cases for the interference of this court to prevent private nuisance, the true rule, as it appears to me, is laid down in the case of Van Bergen v. Van Bergen, in 3 John. Ch. Rep. 287. The chancellor says; “ The cases in which chancery has interfered by injunction to prevent or remove a private nuisance, are those in which the nuisance has been erected to the prejudice or annoyance of a right which the other party had long previously enjoyed. It must be a strong and mischievous case of pressing necessity, or the right must have been previously established at law, to entitle the party to call to his aid the jurisdiction of this court.”

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Related

Story v. Odin
12 Mass. 157 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1815)

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.J. Eq. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robeson-v-pittenger-njch-1838.