Stevenson v. Mellor

97 A. 393, 252 Pa. 219, 1916 Pa. LEXIS 597
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1916
DocketAppeal, No. 161
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 A. 393 (Stevenson v. Mellor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Mellor, 97 A. 393, 252 Pa. 219, 1916 Pa. LEXIS 597 (Pa. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moschzisker,

This is an appeal from a judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.

Tbe plaintiff averred in his statement of claim that be owned tbe lot, No. 604 Wood street, Pittsburgh, and tbe defendants owned tbe adjoining lot, No. 606; that in February, 1910, an old party wall stood upon tbe line between these two lots; that plaintiff bad plans prepared for erecting a new four-story building on bis lot, with a new and suitable party wall to replace tbe old one; that tbe defendants requested tbe plaintiff to change bis plans and construct a wall of sufficient strength to support an eight-story building, at tbe same time offering to pay one-balf tbe excess cost; that in answer to this proposition tbe plaintiff, by a letter dated March 2,1910, offered “to accept $1,200.00 cash from tbe defendants and pay tbe cost of shoring,” this amount to be allowed as a credit when use of tbe wall should be made by tbe defendants; that tbe latter, by letter dated March 4,1910, accepted said alternative proposition, and agreed to pay tbe $1,200.00 “during tbe construction of said party wall”; that in pursuance of tbe contract thus created tbe plaintiff built tbe wall, completing it in December, 1910, but tbe defendants refused to pay tbe $1,200.00 called for by tbe agreement.

Tbe affidavit of defense admitted tbe wall was built “'in pursuance of tbe contract set forth in said letters”; but tbe defendants averred that tbe plaintiff, after paying $805.60 for shoring, bad insisted upon tbe inclusion [221]*221of this expense, as a part of the cost of the party wall, in the estimate and certificate made and issued by the superintendent of the Bureau of Building Inspection. The defendants further averred that they had tendered the sum of $1,200 to the plaintiff on condition that this charge of $805.60 should not be included in the aforesaid official estimate, but that the tender had been refused; finally, that it was the understanding and agreement between the parties, “as evidenced by said letters,” that “plaintiff was not only to pay the cost of said shoring, but the cost thereof......was not to be construed as a part of the cost of the said party wall for which the defendants were to pay when they made use of the said wall for additional stories.”

' In an opinion granting judgment to the plaintiff, the court below states that the facts set forth in the defendants’ affidavit do not constitute a defense, because, when the defendants, or their successors in title, come to use the party wall, and the plaintiff, or his successors, seek to obtain one-half the cost thereof, the former will not only be entitled to a credit for the $1,200.00 if paid on the judgment, but they will also be entitled to an-allowance of one-half of the $805.60 included in the official estimate, and at that time they will not be precluded by reason of the building inspector’s certificate from claiming all credits allowed “in the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendants”; that this is a correct view of the case we shall endeavor to make plain, in the hope of avoiding possible future misunderstanding and consequent litigation.

Section 9 of the Act of June 7,1895, P. L. 135, governing the subjects of party walls in cities of the second class, provides that the superintendent of the Bureau of Building Inspection shall ascertain the cost of such walls and determine the proportions to be paid by the adjoining owner or owners, “of which he shall give a certificate to the builder, which certificate shall be conclusive of all matters therein contained”; further, that [222]*222the owner or owners of the adjoining lot shall not use the wall until they pay to the first builder, “his heirs or assigns,” the proportion of the cost of said wall “as fixed by said superintendent.” The defendants call attention to this act of assembly and point to the official estimate and certificate annexed to their affidavit of defense, which latter, on their face, expressly purport to have been made under the act in question, and they contend that, when the plaintiff insisted upon having included in such estimate and certificate the cost of shoring, he broke the very contract upon which he subsequently brought action; therefore, they say, the plaintiff, having breached his contract, is not entitled to sue thereon, and hence they are not obliged to pay any part of the cost of the party wall until actual use is made thereof.

The defense being as just stated, it becomes necessary to construe the contract at bar and consider in connection therewith the Act of 1895, supra, in order to decide the present and future effect of their respective provisions ; for, if the building inspector’s estimate and certificate comprehend a conclusive adjudication that the defendants, or their successors in title, must in the future, when they come to use the party wall, pay one-half the cost of the shoring, then there is substance in the defendants’ contention that the position taken by the plaintiff in insisting upon the inclusion of that item of expense in such estimate must be viewed as the first step in a breach of his contract to pay the entire cost of the shoring without recourse to the defendants, if such was his contract. While on the other hand, if the contract was merely that the plaintiff should pay the original cost of shoring, with the right to recover one-half thereof as part of the value of the party wall, when used by the defendants, or if the inclusion of such item of expense in the official estimate and certificate is not conclusive against the defendants, so as to compel payment on its account when the wall is used by them in the future, then there is no strength in the defendants’ contention.

[223]*223In Fritz v. Hathaway, 135 Pa. 274, 280, we state, through Mr. Justice Mitchell, that “a judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense is, in effect, a judgment on demurrer”; therefore, on a rule for such a judgment, all material averments of fact in the affidavit of defense that are sufficiently stated and relevant to the claim as averred in the declaration, are, in effect, admitted to be true for the purpose in hand, and, when the rule is made absolute, neither the plaintiff nor those claiming through him can, in any subsequent proceeding relating to the same subject-matter, deny the truth of the relevant, material facts thus established. Here the contract between the plaintiff and the defendants, as well as the building inspector’s estimate and certificate, are established of record, for all of these writings are made part of the affidavit of defense; furthermore, the defendants therein aver it was agreed between the parties to the contract that the plaintiff should pay the original expense of the shoring without recourse to the defendants, and the written agreement shown by the two letters is not only susceptible of, but calls for that construction.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A. 393, 252 Pa. 219, 1916 Pa. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-mellor-pa-1916.