Schlessinger v. Rosenheim

2 Tenn. App. 529, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 22, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 529 (Schlessinger v. Rosenheim) 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
Schlessinger v. Rosenheim, 2 Tenn. App. 529, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 53 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

Market street and Broad street, in Chattanooga, are parallel streets, Broad being the next street west of Market.

The complainant, Schlessinger, on August 10, 1922, acquired a lease of a building extending from Market to Board, and the WalkOver Shoe Company, a corporation with which he was connected and for whose benefit he had leased the building, began occupying it as a retail shoe store on or about the first of November, 1922. *530 This building is spoken of in the record as the Walk-Over building, and as No. 723 Market street.

The building immediately north of and adjoining it also extended through from Market to Broad. It is spoken of in the record as the Alcazar building, and as No. 721 Market street. It was in the possession of the defendant Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., a corporation of which Mr. W. E. Wilkerson was president and directing head, under a long term lease. The defendants, William Rosenheim, and wife, Belle Lob Rosenheim, were the owners of the reversionary interest in this building, having bought it subject to the lease on July 12, 1919.

The building just north of and adjoining this Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building also extended through from Market to Broad. It was occupied by the Piggly-Wiggly Company, and is spoken of in the record as the Piggly-Wiggly building.

A part of the roof of the Piggly-Wiggly building was higher than a part of the roof of the Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building, and a part of the roof of the Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building was higher than a part of the roof of the Walk-Over or No. 723 Market street building.

On December 22, 1922, during a hard rain, water accumulated on the roof of the Walk-Over or No. 723 Market street building in such a large and excessive volume that it went through the roof and damaged some of the stock of goods, fixtures, decorations, etc., of the Walk-Over Shoe Company.

In a day or two thereafter the Walk-Over Shoe Company, through its attorney, Mr. Joe V. Williams, notified the defendants, Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., and Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim of the damage, and that the accumulation of the large and excessive volume of water on the roof over its store was due to the fact that rain water falling on the roof of the Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building was diverted onto the roof of the Walk-Over or No. 723 Market street building. At the time this notice was given, Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim were in Baltimore, Maryland, where Mr. Rosenheim was confined to a hospital. But their son called upon Mr. Wilkerson, president of the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., and got the impression that that company would handle the matter and remedy the defect if any existed in the roof of the Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building. Upon the return of Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim to Chattanooga about the first of January, 1923, they called upon Mr. Williams and showed him copies of the leases .under which the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., was in possession of the Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building, and were told by Mr. Williams that he doubted whether the Walk-Over Shoe Company could hold them (Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim) liable. From Mr. Williams’ office, they *531 went to Mr. Wilkerson’s office. They testified, that Mr. Wilkerson told them that the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., would handle the matter and would remedy whatever if any defect existed. Mr. Wilkerson, upon the other hand, testified that he told them merely that the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., would do whatever its leases required with reference to remedying defects in the roof.

On June 25, 1923, during another hard rain, water again accumulated in a large and excessive volume on the roof of the WalkOver or No. 723 Market street building and went through and damaged some of the stock of goods, fixtures, ornaments, etc., of the Walk-Over Shoe Company.

On August 9, 1923, the complainants, Mr. Schlessinger and WalkOver Shoe Company, filed the bill in this cause against the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim and the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., seeking the issuance if a mandatory injunction commanding the defendants to remove a down spout or pipe alleged to be so constructed and maintained by them as to throw water from the roof of their building onto the roof of complainants’ building, and enjoining defendants from causing or permitting water falling on the roof of their building from being thrown onto the roof of complainants’ building. The bill also sought to recover damages sustained in the two overflows of December 22,1922, and June 25, 1923.

The Chancellor held that complainants were entitled to the mandatory injunction. The same was issued, and the down spout or pipe complained of was removed by the defendant, Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., and on final hearing the injunction was made perpetual. The Chancellor also decreed that since no notice was given of any alleged defects or nuisance prior to the first overflow, there could be no recovery for the damages sustained by that overflow. There was no appeal from this feature of the case and it will be unnecessary to notice it further. The Chancellor further decreed that the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., was liable to the Walk-Over Shoe Company for the sum of $823.93, with $88.58 interest -from August 9, 1923, the date of the filing of the original bill, a total of $912.51, the same being the total damages sustained from the second overflow, i. e. on June 25, 1923. But no recovery was allowed against Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim.

Prom this decree the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., alone has appealed to this court and assigned errors making two questions; First, that under the law and the facts as disclosed by the record it was not liable to the Walk-Over Shoe Company for the damages sustained by it as a result of the second overflow; Second, that even if it was liable for some of these damages, it was not liable for the full amount sustained, and was only liable for. the part that was caused by the rain water which had fallen on its own building. This, *532 upon the theory that a part of the water which caused the damage had fallen on the roof of the Piggly-Wiggly building* and from there had been thrown onto defendant’s building, and then onto complainants ’ building, and the defendant and the owner of the Piggly-Wiggly were not joint tort feasors; citing Swain v. Tenn. Copper Co., 111 Tenn., 430; Gay v. State, 90 Tenn., 646; Chipman v. Palmer, 77 N. Y., 51; Miller v. Highland Ditch Co., 87 Calif., 430.

As to the first assignment of error; we think the Chancellor was correct in holding the Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., liable to the Walk-Oyer Shoe Company for the amount of damages sustained as a result of the second overflow.

The Tennessee Enterprises, Inc., was in actual physical possession of the Alcazar or No. 721 Market street building, under the terms of a long term lease which provided that it should keep the building, roof, etc., in repair, Mr. and Mrs. Rosenheim owning only the reversionary interest, and we think the duty was upon it not to so maintain the building as to wrongfully and unlawfully damage the building next to it or the occupants thereof.

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Related

Chipman v. . Palmer
77 N.Y. 51 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)
Gay v. State
90 Tenn. 645 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1891)
Swain v. Tennessee Copper Co.
111 Tenn. 430 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 529, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlessinger-v-rosenheim-tennctapp-1926.