Walker et al. v. Strosnider.

Decision Date15 February 1910
Citation67 W.Va. 39
PartiesWalker et al. v. Strosnider.
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
1. Adjoining Landowners Lateral Support Land in Natural State.

An owner of land is entitled, ex jure naturae, to lateral support in the adjacent jand for his soil, but not for buildings erected thereon.

2. Same Lateral Support Excavations Causing Injury Liability.

An excavation, made by an adjacent owner, so as to take away the lateral support; afforded to his neighbor's ground, by the earth so removed, and cause it, of its own weight, to fall, slide or break away, makes the former liable for the injury, no matter how carefully he may have excavated. Such right of support is a property r'.gbt and absolute.

3. Same Lateral Support Buildings Excavations by Neighbor Care Required.

Though an adjoining owner has no right of support in his neighbor's land for his buildings, unless he has acquired it by grant or otherwise, and the latter may excavate in his land so as to cause them to fall, without committing a trespass or taking away a property right, provided the adjacent soil would not have fallen of its own weight, he may nevertheless be liable, in respect to his conduct, for the injury done.

4. Same.

An adjoining owner, excavating on his own land, must exercise reasonable care, prudence and skill, in doing so, for the safety of buildings, if any, standing on the adjacent land. This duty is enjoined, not by any right of support, ex jure naturae, that the owner of the building has in the adjoining land, but by a legal rule of conduct, requiring every owner of property so to use it as not to injure his neighbors's.

5. Same.

In altering the condition of bis land, adjoining another's building, by excavating the soil and replacing it with a structure, the owner must not only abstain from collateral negligent or wrongful acts, such as unnecessarily heavy blasting, digging out the adjacent wall, projecting heavy articles against the wall or building, and the like, but must perform the work with reasonable care for the safety of the adjacent building, such as diligence in the construction of his wall after having removed the soil, removal of the soil and replacement thereof with the wall by sections, if necessary as a measure of reasonable precaution, or the adoption of other reasonable and practicable precautions.

6. Same Lateral Support Building Temporary Support in Excavating.

In such case, the measure of his duty goes beyond the exercise of care in making the excavation, a mere incident of the alteration intended, and extends to reasonable means of temporary support of the adjacent building, while the wOrk of erecting the new structure is in progress.

7. Same Lateral Support Buildings Temporary Support in Excavating Extent of Care Required.

Though this duty, respecting adjacent buildings, is imposed by law upon a person, while engaged in altering the condition of his own property, he is not a guarantor of their safety, nor bound to take precautions, or adopt measures, for their protection beyond such as are reasonably practicable, not unduly expensive, and amount to reasonable and ordinary care and prudence for their safety.

8. Sajme Lateral Support Buildings Notice of Intent to Excavate.

In such case, the adjoining owner is under the further duty of giving the owner of the building notice of his intention to alter the condition of his property, the character of the alteration to be made and the time thereof, and allow him opportunity to adopt such further measures for the absolute protection and sceurity of his building as he may see fit to adopt.

9. Same Lateral Support Buildings Notice of Intention to Excavate Necessity for Formal Notice.

The giving of formal notice is unnecessary in such case, if the owner of the building has full knowledge of the character and time of the making of the alteration and opportunity to adopt protective measures for the safety of his building.

10. Same Lateral Support Buildings Notice of Intention to Excavate Effect on Duty to Exercise Care.

Such notice or knowledge on the part of the owner of the building does not absolve the adjoining owner from duty to exercise reasonable care and prudence to avoid injury to the building in improving his own property. The giving of such notice, when necessary, is simply an additional precaution, omission of which would, under some circumstances, amount to negligence.

11. Same Lateral Support Buildings Excavation by Neighbor Duty of Owner to Prop Building.

The duty of the owner of the building to prop it up, if necessary, is not inconsistent with the requirement of care on the part of the adjoining owner in the improvement of his property. If the latter exercises reasonable care and injury nevertheless results, he is not liable, the loss being attributable in law to the failure of the owner to do further things necessary to absolute security. If, on the contrary, he did not exercise such care, he is liable, although the owner could have prevented the injury.

12. Same Lateral Support Use of Premises Affecting Adjoining

Land Defective Buildings Duty of Adjacent Owner Excavating.

Neither defective or improper construction of the building, nor its use for manufacturing purposes, involving the running of machinery therein, will bar an action for damages for injury thereto, resulting from negligent excavating, under the law of contributory negligence. The excavator must deal with the conditions as he finds them, using reasonable and ordinary care, under all the circumstances, to avoid injury to the building and its contents.

13. Same Excavation Affecting Adjoining' Structure Rights of Tenant.

In case of the fall of a building, occasioned by negligent excavation, a tenant of a single floor or room thereof, deprived of his right of occupancy and use, and sustaining loss of personal property, by reason of the fall, has a right of action for at least nominal damages, in respect to the tenancy, and for consequential damages, in respect to the personal property injured and destroyed.

14. Master and Servant Injury to Third Person Independent Contractor.

Employment under a contract, defining not only what is to be done, but also the manner in which the work is to be executed, is not independent, and, if injury to a third person result from the performance of the work in conformity with such contract, and the thing done or the manner of its performance if wrongful or negligent, the employer is liable.

15. Same.

If an adjoining owner, about to excavate, along the side of a building, belonging to another person, for the erection of a building on his own property, adopt, as a means of protecting the building, the cutting of a trench and construction of a concrete retaining wall therein, four feet from the building along the side thereof, and then running directly to one corner thereof, and let of work of cutting the trench and constructing the retaining wall to contractors, under contracts, leaving to them no discretion as to where or how such wall shall be constructed and such measure of protection does not amount to the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care for the safety of the building, and, by reason of such neglect, the building fall, the employer is liable.

16. Adjoining Landowners Injury to Building by Excavating on Adjacent Premises Sufficiency of Declaration.

It suffices in a declaration, seeking damages for an injury to a building or a tenant thereof, resulting from negligent excavation, to set forth the relative situation of the properties, the interest of the plaintiff, the duty of the defendant, the acts done and the results, and charge that the work was done injuriously, wrongfully, carelessly and negligently.

17. Evidence Opinion Evidence Impressions in Nature of Physical Facts.

The opinion of a witness, as to the physical cause of the fall of a building, who, being in it, just a few minutes before it fell, observed indications of the impending collapse and was on the premises and examined it immediately after it fell, is admissible in evidence, on the ground that the impression, made upon his mind at the time, is in the nature of a physical fact, and, the further ground of his obvious inability to portray to the jury all the facts, tending to produce the impression.

18. Depositions Admissibility in Evidence Opinions of Experts Based on Assumed Facts.

Opinions of expert witnesses, based on assumed facts, stated in hypothetical questions embodied in depositions, taken in advance of trial, may be read as evidence on the trial, provided evidence of all the facts, on which they were based, has been introducd.

19. Appeal and Error Harmless Error Exclusion of Evidence.

Exclusion of evidence, constituting no ground of defense, offered by a defendant, though admissible if offered by the plaintiff, as tending to sustain the action, is not prejudicial to the former, and, therefore, not erroneous.

20. Same Exceptions Excluding Answer of Witness.

To sustain an exception for refusal to permit a witness to answer a question, the record must show what answer the witness was expected to make.

21. Trial Instructions Misleading Instructions.

It is not error to refuse instructions, so framed as to give them a tendency to mislead the jury.

22. Adjoining Landowners Actions Instructions.

In an action for injury to the contents of a building by alleged negligent alteration of the condition of adjacent property, it is reversible error to refuse an instruction, telling the jury they shculd find for the defendant, unless they believe the injury was the natural and probable consequence of negligence or a wrongful act on the part of the defendant and that such consequence ought to have been foreseen by him in the light of the attending circumstances.

Error to Circuit Court, Mingo County.

Action by Ed. L. Walker and others against John Strosnider. Judgment for plaintiffs, and defendant brings error.

Reversed and Remanded for New Trial.

Sheppard, Goodykoontz &...

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