DocketNumber: Appeals, No. 440
Citation Numbers: 167 Pa. 296, 31 A. 646, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 897
Judges: Dean, Fell, Green, McCollum, Mitchell, Sterrett, Williams
Filed Date: 4/8/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
pile’s appeal.
Opinion by
The learned judge of the court below was right in holding that the wall in controversy was not a party wall. It was not intended to be. The defendants were building a factory and under the advice of their architect decided to build within their own lines in order to avoid the danger of injury to others from vibration which might result from the use of their machinery. They called upon the district surveyor to locate their line and built within it as so ascertained. Subsequent surveys by city surveyors have determined that the line was not accurately located at first but was about one and a half inches over on the plaintiffs. This leaves the ends of the stones used in the foundation wall projecting into the plaintiffs’ lands below the surface one and three eighths inches. This unintentional intrusion into the plaintiffs’ close is the narrow foundation on which this bill in equity rests. The wall resting on the stone foundation is conceded to be within the defendants’ line. The defendants offered nevertheless to make it a party wall by agreement and give to plaintiffs free use of it, as such, on condition that the windows on the third and fourth floors should remain open
pedbick’s appeal.
Opinion by
April 8, 1895:
This is an appeal from the same decree just considered on the appeal of J. M. Pile, et al. It is not denied that the foundation wall on which the appellant has built was located under a mistake made by the district surveyor, and does in fact project slightly into the plaintiffs’ land. For one inch and three eighths the ends of the stones in the wall are said to project beyond the division line. The defendants have no right at law or in equity to occupy land that does not belong to them and we do not see how the court below could have done otherwise than recognize and act upon this principle. They must remove
Proctor v. Huntington , 238 P.3d 1117 ( 2010 )
McNanamy v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. , 114 Pa. Super. 282 ( 1934 )
Ventresca v. Ventresca , 182 Pa. Super. 248 ( 1956 )
Mary Jane Stevens Co. v. First Nat. Bldg. Co. , 89 Utah 456 ( 1936 )
SmithKline Beecham Corp. v. Apotex Corp. , 247 F. Supp. 2d 1011 ( 2003 )