Wells Amusement Co. v. Eros
This text of 85 So. 692 (Wells Amusement Co. v. Eros) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The appellee, complainant, had, prior to 1917, erected upon his lot in Anniston a two-story brick building. The south wall of this building was constructed upon the southern margin of appellee’s lot. The appellant owned the lot next, on the south, to appellee’s lot, and constructed thereon a one-story place of amusement. The plan of appellant’s building was evidently designed to avail of appellee’s south wall as the means of inclosing (in major part) the north side of appellant’s structure. The appellant’s building does not,, however, touch appellee’s south wall, except in this way; The end, edge, or flange of the paper composition roof of appellant’s building is pasted or glued to the surface of appellee’s south wall' about midway of its height. The process of attaching the roof to this wall appears to be permanent in character. The appellee filed this hill, wherein he seeks mandatory injunction to compel appellant to detach from the south wall of appellee’s building the flange of the composition roof fixed thereto by appellant. The court below granted the relief, and from that decree this appeal results.
The bill in this case appropriately invoked the stated jurisdiction of the court of equity, 'if the act of this appellant amounts to a gain or encroachment upon the property of its adjoining proprietor, the appellee. The court, below was authorized to conclude from the evidence that the wall to which the flange of appellee’s composition roof was glued was flush with the property line of appellee, and was hence beyond any possible right of the appellant, as the adjoining owner, to use or avail of it as the physical support or complement of the roof of appellant’s building. What appellant did was therefore an invasion of appellee’s property, for its own unauthorized purpose. This use of appellee’s property was of sugh character as to afford the basis for the acquiring of an adverse right or easement, thus laying the foundation for a right or easement that might, if perfected, impair the value of the property; and this condition has been held to entitle the owner, whose right to immunity from invasion has been violated, to the remedy by mandatory injunction. 1 High on Inj. p. 671; Norwalk Oo. v. Vernam, 75 Conn. 662, 55 Atl. 168, 96 Am. St. Rep. 246, note, p. 248.
The decree of the court below conforihs .to the .law applicable to such circumstances. It is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
85 So. 692, 204 Ala. 239, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-amusement-co-v-eros-ala-1920.