Wall v. Eisenstadt

154 A. 651, 51 R.I. 339, 1931 R.I. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 4, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 A. 651 (Wall v. Eisenstadt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. Eisenstadt, 154 A. 651, 51 R.I. 339, 1931 R.I. LEXIS 47 (R.I. 1931).

Opinion

*340 Hahn, J.

This is a bill in equity to restrain adjoining landowners from committing a nuisance by erecting an extension to their garage upon a portion of Constitution street in the town of Bristol. The cause is here on complainants’ appeal from a decree of the Superior Court dismissing the bill.

The court below found that complainants had not proved that they would suffer such substantial damage and injury as a result of the extension of the garage as to enable them to maintain the bill as individuals and also that the proposed addition would not extend into' Constitution street as the present occupation line is the northerly line thereof.

Complainants’ house is situated on the north side of Constitution street and adjoins the respondents’ land on the east. The bill alleges that the building inspector of the town of Bristol threatens to grant to the respondents permission to extend their garage southerly into said street a distance of about eleven feet. The complainants contend that the proposed extension of said building into the street will cause special damage to them. There is a sun parlor on the southwesterly corner of complainants’ house with a window facing west. The distance between the division line of the properties and the westerly side of complainants’ house is 17.64 feet. Respondents’ garage at present extends easterly to the boundary line between the properties and southerly to a line which complainants contend is the *341 northerly line of Constitution street and therefore the proposed addition to the garage will extend 11.57 feet southerly into Constitution street. Such addition will materially interfere with the view from the westerly window of complainants’ sun parlor. The complainants have a clear view from this westerly window down Constitution street to Hope street. The proposed addition to the garage will also obstruct the air and breeze from the west. A real estate broker testified that in his opinion the erection of the proposed addition would cause a substantial loss and depreciation in the value of complainants’ property. An engineer testified to the obstruction of view and to the loss of light and air. That such would be the effect of the proposed extension is obvious from an examination of a photograph filed as one of the exhibits.

The law recognizes an easement of light and air in the street in favor of the abutting owner. “This right to light and air is not restricted to the space immediately in front of the abutter’s property but extends on either side a reasonable distance, to prevent the obstruction of the access of light and air to the abutter’s property. ” Lewis on Eminent Domain, (3rd ed.) Secs. 121, 123. “An easement of light, air, or view is a valuable property right, and in general it is held that an interference with it by a structure on a street or highway is ground for an injunction at the instance of the abutting owner.” 40 A. L. R. 1321, note. See also World Realty Co. v. City of Omaha, 113 Neb. 396 (1925); Clark v. Peckham, 10 R. I. 35; Sweet v. Conley, 20 R. I. 381; Steere v. Tucker, 39 R. I. 531; Trafton v. Downey, 51 R. I. 87.

In Steere v. Tucker, supra, respondent’s building stood upwards of forty feet from the nearest portion of complainant’s land and upwards of sixty-five feet from the nearest part of complainant’s house, by reason of which it was held that the building did not in any substantial manner interfere with complainant’s right of view. The court said, p. 545: “There is no evidence from either himself (complainant) *342 or any other witness to show that his property has been injured in the slightest degree; there is nothing to show that any air or any light is cut off from his premises by reason of the alleged encroachment.” . . . “No inference can be drawn from its size or location that it even casts a shadow at any time upon complainant’s land, or that it interferes in the slightest degree with the free circulation of the air, so far as the complainant is concerned.” This decision emphasizes the fact that there was no special damage to complainant and recognizes the principle thereafterwards laid down in Trafton v. Downey, supra, that one suffering “a private and special injury different from that suffered by the public at large ... is entitled to relief by his individual suit.” In the present case respondents’ building extends to the boundary or division line of the two properties and within eighteen feet of complainants’ house. It is clear that the proposed addition would not only cast a shadow upon complainants’ land but would materially interfere with the complainants’ right to light, air and view.

There remains to be considered the question of the width of Constitution street and whether the land upon which respondents propose to build is a portion of said street. To determine the true width and location of Constitution street recourse must be had to certain documents and plats relating thereto, some of which are ancient. These documents and plats of ancient and recent surveys form the basis from which, without great difficulty, it is possible to determine the width and location of Constitution street.

In the first of these documents, dated August 6, 1680, John Walley and others, all of Boston in the Colony of Massachusetts, agreed with Josiah Winslow, Governor of New Plymouth Colony, and other colonial officials to buy the land which now comprises the town of Bristol. These men in certain of the documents are sometimes described as the “Proprietors” or “Four Purchasers.” August 27, 1680, the “Four Purchasers” entered into an agreement, called, the “Grand Articles,” with certain other prospective pur *343 chasers to receive fractional shares in the land acquired by the "Four Purchasers.” April 7, 1686, a committee was appointed "to take care” that the Grand Articles be recorded and "the Deeds from the proprietors be completed. ” June 16, 1690, the Proprietors executed to the “Inhabitants of the Town of Bristol” the “Deed of Highways” which, with the plats thereafter filed, forms the basis of complainants’ contention that Constitution street has a width of five rods and that the land upon which respondents propose to build is within said street.

So much of the Deed of Highways as is necessary to be considered in relation to the streets of Bristol, and more particularly Constitution street, is as follows: “ . . . the lowermost thereof, named Thames Street, lyeth according to the conveniency of the Shore; the next above it is Hope Street and is Four Rods wide, and is laid out straight from end to end. The third from the Salt water is High Street, and is Five Rods wide, laid out likewise straight from one end to the other. And the Fourth' or uppermost from the Sea is Wood street likewise straight, and Four Rods wide from end to end.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 A. 651, 51 R.I. 339, 1931 R.I. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-eisenstadt-ri-1931.