Urbach v. Phillips

21 Va. Cir. 451, 1967 Va. Cir. LEXIS 22
CourtRichmond City Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1967
DocketCase No. B-8423
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Va. Cir. 451 (Urbach v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richmond City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Urbach v. Phillips, 21 Va. Cir. 451, 1967 Va. Cir. LEXIS 22 (Va. Super. Ct. 1967).

Opinion

By JUDGE A. CHRISTIAN COMPTON

A decree will be entered in favor of the plaintiffs in this cause: (1) requiring the defendants to restore adequate lateral support of the plaintiffs’ land; (2) requiring the defendants to cause to be replaced to the level of the plaintiffs' land in its natural state the soil and dirt which has subsided and eroded since the removal of the wall in question, such soil to be replaced, of course, on the west side of the eastern line of the plaintiffs’ property; and, (3) awarding damages to the plaintiffs in the amount of $625.00. The decree will also enter judgment in favor of the plaintiffs upon the cross-bill.

The plaintiffs, owners of the property known as 608 East Main Street in this city, allege that the defendants, who own the property at 610-612 East Main .Street which adjoins theirs to the east thereof, removed a wall located on the western line of the defendants’ property and that, as a result, the plaintiffs have lost the lateral support of their land to which they are entitled. They claim that their land has been caused to crumble and fall away creating a dangerous condition and restricting the plaintiffs* use of their property. They seek an injunction requiring the defendants to restore the wall and ask for [452]*452compensation in damages for loss of use of their land or, in the alternative, ask that the defendants pay as damages an amount sufficient to enable the plaintiffs to reconstruct the wall on the plaintiffs' land and they ask to use so much of the defendant’s property as may be needed during such reconstruction.

The defendants deny that there is any duty of lateral support owed to the plaintiffs under the circumstances of this case and assert that even if any such legal duty is imposed upon them, that the plaintiffs created a condition which caused the removal of the wall in question by their actions upon 608 E. Main Street. The crossbill seeking an award of damages against the plaintiffs arising out of the alleged encroachment by the plaintiffs upon the property of the defendants was abandoned during closing argument.

From the evidence, a great deal of it being conflicting, the Court finds the facts of this cause to be that in 1945 the defendants acquired 610-612. East Main Street, a lot 30.5 feet wide, having two buildings thereon, one building fronting on the north side of Main Street and another brick building on the rear of the lot which had been used for car storage. After continuing this use of the building in the rear for five or six years, it was torn down with the west wall of the building left standing on the defendants’ west property line to the rear of their lot. This is the wall in question which was removed for a length of approximately 55 feet in the early part of 1964, such wall having furnished iateral support to that portion of the plaintiffs’ land located to the rear of their premises at 608 E. Main Street. This wall was about six feet in height at its south end and about eight feet high at its north end when measured from the plaintiffs’ land.

The plaintiffs’ property was 18.15 feet wide at the front and had been in the Urbach family for at least fifty years. It was higher in elevation than the defendants’, the land sloping down to the East. It, too, had a building to the rear, which "straddled'' the property line of 606 E. Main Street, the property adjoining the plaintiffs’ to the West which was owned by the witness Bailey. The east wall of this building was about three feet west of the wall in question. During the "latter [453]*453part" of 1963, Bailey and the plaintiffs agreed to tear down the old building straddling their property line in order to clear the rear of their lots for parking. This old building had a basement and the debris was allowed to fall into the basement when the building was torn down in December of 1963. Thereafter, some grading took place of the area in the rear of the plaintiffs* lot and bank gravel was spread on Bailey’s lot, but no dirt or gravel was piled against the wall in question. There was no change made in the level of the plaintiffs* property nor was any dirt removed from the west side of the wall in question. A tree root had grown through the top of the wall and when this was pulled out three top layers of brick were knocked off but this minor damage was immediately replaced.

During the process of the work on 606-608 E. Main Street, an iron plate described as a "dead man" was purchased to reinforce the wall in question, however, it was not used because the wall did not need strengthening.

After several attempts had been made in 1961 and 1962 by the defendant E. E. Phillips to acquire the use of the rear of the plaintiffs’ lot for parking purposes and after an exchange of correspondence (P-18, 19, 20) wherein that defendant stated that "we want the fifteen inch space that the wall takes up for our use" and pointing out that "we have been maintaining and keeping my own wall up, holding their soil in, at considerable expense to me . , . for twenty years," the wall in question was removed by the defendants during March of 1964. The defendants maintained that the wall was caused to lean to the east from four to twelve inches as a result of the activities which had taken place on the Bailey-Urbach property including the destruction of a pilaster located at point C on defendants* Exhibit 1, and that since vehicles parked on the Phillips* lot were in danger of being damaged if the wall fell, it was removed. The defendants urged that the wall "was a sorry wall" being constructed with a poor grade mortar and that it "wouldn’t stand the work they (Bailey and Urbach) were doing."

Thereafter, the plaintiffs* land on their east property line adjoining and along the former location of the wall started to crumble, give way and erode. The area available to the plaintiffs for parking on their lot was [454]*454reduced and it has been necessary to call a wrecker several times to pull vehicles from the eroded area.

The plaintiff’s claim that they could have derived rental income of $2,700.00 for parking and that the plaintiff Howard Urbach has been forced to park his car elsewhere at a cost of $625.00 because he has to use his car several times a day and he needed ready access to it. Had their land not fallen away, space would be available for the parking of five cars but only three or four cars may be parked in the area under the present conditions. In 1964, the Plaintiffs received a contractor's estimate for the erection of a "masonry block wall" on their property (P-2) at a cost exceeding $1,000.00.

Duty of Lateral Support

Virginia follows the general rule in this country which is well stated in Restatement, Torts, Section 817(1) as follows: "a person who withdraws the naturally necessary lateral support of land in another’s possession, or support which has been substituted for the naturally necessary support, is liable for a subsidence of such land of the other as was naturally dependent upon the support withdrawn, in the absence of a superseding cause or other reason for relieving him." (Italics added.) See 1 M.J.» Adjoining Landowners, Section 5; 1 Am. Jur. 2d, Adjoining Landowners, Section 37; 2 C.J.S., Adjoining Landowners, Section 5.

This rule of absolute liability for the withdrawal of lateral support of the dominant estate in its natural condition is to be compared with the rule of liability for the negligent withdrawal of lateral support of land which has been burdened by buildings or structures of any kind.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Va. Cir. 451, 1967 Va. Cir. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urbach-v-phillips-vaccrichcity-1967.