Judges: Brunt
Filed Date: 2/17/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This action was commenced to restrain the defendant from building a certain party wall six stories high. ■ It appeared upon the trial that the parties to the action were the owners of adjoining premises, known as Nos. 23 and 25 Spring street. They executed a party-wall agreement, by which, after reciting the ownership of the premises known as No. 25 Spring street by the defendant, and the ownership of No. 23 Spring street by the plaintiff, and that the defend
We fail to find any such restriction contained in the agreement. It was entirely immaterial what the defendant contemplated, at the time of entering into the agreement, in respect to the height of the building which he was about to erect, because, the wall being a party wall, he had the right to increase the height of the wall, provided such increase could be made without detriment to the strength of the wall or to the property of the adjacent owner. Brooks v. Curtis, 50 N. Y. 639. And this has become the established rule in reference to the owners of party walls in this state. Therefore, unless the agreement contained restrictive words prohibiting the use of the wall for a building of more than five stories in height, the defendant, if he had originally constructed a five-story building, would have the right to put an additional story upon it, unless he endangered the safety of the wall, which is not claimed. Therefore the recital as to what was contemplated at the time of entering into this party-wall agreement could not in any wise restrict the rights which had been conferred by the active portions of the agreement itself. •We think, therefore, that there was no ground for the interference of the court, and that the defendant had the right to increase the height of the wall as he did.
As to the question upon the construction of the agreement, and the evidence attempted to be introduced for the purpose of showing the intention of the parties, such evidence was entirely immaterial. The agreement is not in any way ambiguous. It does not need construction, and, as far as this question is concerned, it is entirely immaterial, as already observed, what was in the contemplation of the parties at the time of entering into the agreement as to. the height of the building to be erected. They intended to enter' into the party-wall agreement,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.