Stifel v. Hannan

123 S.E. 673, 95 W. Va. 617, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 43
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 123 S.E. 673 (Stifel v. Hannan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stifel v. Hannan, 123 S.E. 673, 95 W. Va. 617, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 43 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

*618 Lively, Judge:

The decrees appealed from enjoin defendant Hannan from laying a concrete sidewalk in “Hubbard’s. Lane,” and require him to disconnect and remove from a water service line in the lane a water pipe which connects his residence therewith. The right of defendant Hannan to lay in the lane a concrete sidewalk four feet wide, with one foot grass strip between it and a six inch curb, abutting his lot is the principal subject of the litigation.

The lane was originally twenty feet wide and extends from the national road (now a paved highway through the city of Wheeling) westwardly a distance of about eight hundred feet to the property of Wm. P. Hubbard, where it ends, a cul de sac, and was reserved and dedicated to the use of the grantees by Samuel H. B. Carter in 1852 in three deeds made to the predecessors in title of Stifels, Hubbard and Hannan, all of whom .abut the lane on its southern line. In 1898 Stamm conveyed the land abutting it on the north to Burdats and reserved a ten foot strip adjoining the lane along its northern line the entire length of the Stamm property. In 1900 the owners abutting the lane on the north where the ten foot strip was laid out, agreed in writing with Hubbard and the then abutting owners on the south (excepting, however, the predecessor in title of defendant Hannan) that the ten foot strip should be added to the lane thus making it thirty feet wide and to be used by all of them for ingress and egress. The agreement by which the lane was thus widened to thirty feet provides that the improvement and maintenance of the lane shall be in such manner as the majority of those entitled to its use may agree upon and determine, each to pay a certain proportion of the costs and expenses, under penalty of forfeiting his right to use! the lane. Defendant Hannan acquired a lot on the south of the lane fronting thereon 231 feet and abutting on the national road about 100 feet, from Mrs. Hess, in the year 1920. The property of the Stifels joins Han-nan’s lot on the west. Mrs. Hess had begun the construction of a dwelling on the lot and had connected a water pipe for the use of the dwelling with a service pipe laid in the ten foot strip which was on the farther side of the lane, necessarily *619 laying it under the lane. This was done by City Suburban Water Company, a public service corporation. It will be seen that all of the abutting land owners on the lane are entitled to use it as a means of ingress .and egress to their respective properties. Hannan by his purchase from Hess was entitled to use the twenty foot lane. The agreement of the year 1900, by which others on the north of the lane acquired the right to use it by adding to its width the ten foot strip inured to Hannan’s benefit; for if those abutting owners on the north side acquired an easement in the lane they must accord to Hannan a like easement in the ten foot strip. They can not encroach on his right of way by user without consideration. Plaintiffs say that although Hannan was not a party to the agreement of 1900 by which the lane was broadened to thirty feet, nor was his predecessor in title, yet equity and good conscience would require him to be bound by its terms; that if he reaped a benefit under the agreement, he should be bound by' its terms, which provide that the majority of the abutting owners shall control in the kind and manner of improvements made in the lane; and plaintiffs, Hubbard, the Stifels and Troll, constitute a majority. They contend that by his answer he claims a benefit in the addition of the ten foot strip and therefore is bound by the terms of the agreement under which it was acquired.

After Plannan had purchased from Hess he began improvement of his lot by filling it, making it from nine to twelve inches higher than the lane, and by constructing a concrete driveway from the national road to his garage near the dwelling, thence down to the lane, and by constructing a concrete walkway from his residence to the lane He proceeded to complete the dwelling house. He also began to lay in the lane a concrete sidewalk four feet wide with a curb six inches wide, and with one foot of ground between the walk and curb for grass. Conceiving the construction of this five and a half foot sidewalk to be an encroachment upon their right of free ingress and egress over the lane, this injunction bill was filed with the above results. It was ascertained about this time that the service water line laid in the ten foot strip had been tapped by a pipe running under the lane, thence to the Han- *620 nan dwelling, and the bill asked that this pipe be removed, on the assumption that it was an encroachment upon the private rights of plaintiffs in the service line, and on their easement in the lane.

Defendant, while admitting that the sidewalk and curb are wholly within the lane,.says he has a right to lay it therein, that it is an improvement and not an obstruction or encroachment and that it will not interfere with plaintiff’s easement over the lane. In further justification he says that he, Stifel and Hubbard, a short time before he began the sidewalk, agreed that the lane should be improved, established a grade for the contemplated sidewalk and the lane on which it abutted, and that thereupon he began the excavation preparatory thereto. As to this alleged agreement, Stifel and Hubbard say they agreed reluctantly with Hannan that the concrete sidewalk insisted upon by him should be four feet wide only, to which Hannan agreed; and that Hannan violated the agreement by taking five and a half féet. Hannan says the water pipe to the residence was connected to the service line at her property line by his predecessor in title, Mrs. Hess; the water supply company having constructed the line, under the lane, and attached it to. the service line therein owned by it.

Thus we have the issues: (a) Hannan asserts a right to lay a five and a half foot’ sidewalk, and avers that it will not interfere with plaintiff’s full and free ingress and egress; that it is an improvement and not an obstruction. Plaintiff’s assert that Hannan has no right to appropriate this much of the lane for a sidewalk; and that it will render the use thereof by them less convenient and in a measure dangerous; (b) plaintiff’s say the water service in the lane belongs to them and was tapped unlawfully; while defendant says it belongs to the water company, and was tapped by it lawfully.

It appears that the Hannan lot was, at the time of its purchase by him, lower than the lane, and that by filling he raised the lot about nine inches higher than the lane. The walk in the lane adjoining his lot was of gravel and extended to the Hubbard property; the lane was improved by crushed stone for a driveway, giving the’ properties adjoining *621 a rural and sylvan appearance; an effect sought for and desired by the then occupants of that vicinity. The entrance to the national road forms a sharp angle. The improved road bed is narrow, and cars pass thereon with difficulty at some parts of it.' Hannan desired a concrete sidewalk with a curb in the lane in front of his property, corresponding with a concrete sidewalk on the national road abutting the other side of his lot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.E. 673, 95 W. Va. 617, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stifel-v-hannan-wva-1924.