1. The rule allowing a lot owner to erect a party wall on the
lot line, and obliging his neighbor, if he use it, to pay part of
the cost, is a condition attached to the lots within the original
Federal City under the powers granted by the original proprietors
of the land,
Page 260 U. S. 448
and, as extended to other parts of the District under an act
authorizing the District Commissioners to establish building
regulations, it has the force of a custom binding wherever a party
wall is reflected by one lot owner without objection by the
adjoining owner. P.
260 U. S.
449.
2. And, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it must be
presumed that the erection of such a wall was done without such
objection. P.
260 U. S.
451.
3. A lot owner who used a party wall waived his right to object,
in defense of an action for the value of the use, that the building
regulations, with which he complied deprived him of his property
without due process of law. P.
260 U. S. 452.
51 App.D.C. 4, 273 F. 366, affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia affirming a judgment for Gish in an action to recover the
value of the use of a party wall by Walker.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
Genevieve K. Gish sued Ernest G. Walker in the Municipal Court
of the District of Columbia for $150 for the use of a party wall on
premises 2327 Ashmead Place, Washington, in that part of the
District of Columbia not included in the original Federal City, and
recovered $144.63. Walker appealed the case to the Supreme Court of
the District. That court on the first trial directed a verdict for
Walker, the defendant, on the ground that he had not used the wall.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals of the District reversed the
judgment because the question whether the defendant used the wall
was a disputable fact which should have been submitted to the jury.
On the second trial, the court submitted the issue to the jury,
which found for the plaintiff and fixed
Page 260 U. S. 449
the value of the use at $85. The Court of Appeals affirmed the
judgment, and the case comes here by writ of error on the issue of
the constitutional validity of the building regulations of the
District of Columbia, which by the Act of June 14, 1878, 20 Stat.
131, ch.194, are given the effect of congressional legislation. It
is urged that they deprive defendant of his property without due
process of law in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The question
was seasonably raised by a request for a charge on the trial and by
proper assignment of error in the proceedings for review. Judicial
Code, § 250;
Smoot v. Heyl, 227 U.
S. 518,
227 U. S.
522.
The history of the law of party walls in Washington is
interesting. Its application is not free from difficulty in that
part of the present Washington which was not included within the
original Federal City. The original proprietors of the land in the
Federal City conveyed it in trust to certain named persons to be
laid out in such streets, squares, and lots as the President of the
United States should approve. Under the trust provisions, the lots
to be sold or distributed were to be subject to such terms and
conditions as might be thought reasonable by the President for
regulating the materials and manner of the buildings and
improvements. President Washington issued regulations, one of which
is in force today. The provided that a person appointed to
superintend buildings might enter on the land of any person to set
out the foundation and regulate the walls to be built between party
and party, as to the breadth and thickness thereof, that the
foundations were to be laid equally upon each lot and to be of the
breadth and thickness thought proper by the superintendent, that
the first builder was to be reimbursed one-half of the cost of the
wall, or as much thereof as the next builder might use, but that
such use could not begin till he had paid the amount fixed by the
superintendent. This has been held to be a condition
Page 260 U. S. 450
annexed to every house lot in the original Washington.
Miller v. Elliot, 5 Cr.C.C. 543, 17 Fed.Cas. 315, No.
9,568. It has been decided to be the only source of the right of a
lot owner in Washington to put his party wall on his neighbor's
land.
Fowler v. Saks, 7 Mackey, 570, 579.
By the Act of Congress of 1878,
supra, the District
Commissioner were authorized to establish building regulations
which should have the force of law; but the regulation of General
Washington was continued in force by them and applied not only to
the Federal City, but to the whole of Washington. The question then
arose what was the effect of this regulation as applied to the
outlying districts of the city which were not included in the lots
of the Federal City, and which were not affected by the grant upon
condition by the original owners of that city. This question was
fully considered in the case of
Fowler v. Koehler, 43
App.D.C. 349, which was a suit like the one at bar for the value of
appropriated use of a party wall in the newer part of the city. The
Court of Appeals of the District held that, because party walls had
in thousands of instances been erected by one of the adjoining
owners on the lot of the other in the belief of both that it was
the exercise of a lawful right as in the original city, a custom
had grown up. So general was this that the court felt justified,
when erection of a party wall by one owner was without objection by
the other, in implying an agreement which would rebut inference of
a trespass. Thus, there had developed a practical uniformity as to
practice in respect of party walls and the law governing them
between the lots in the Federal City and those outside, except
where, in the outlying district, the adjoining owner objected to
the erection of the wall at the time of the construction and took
measures to prevent it. The court in
Fowler v. Koehler
further held that, where party walls were erected in the outside
district under such implied agreements, the same obligation to
Page 260 U. S. 451
contribute to the cost of the wall arose in the outlying
district as against the adjoining owners as in the Federal City if
they used the party wall, and that the relations between the
parties were regulated by the district building regulations.
We think the reasoning of the court in
Fowler v.
Koehler sustains its conclusion, and that the conclusion helps
to the solution of an unfortunately difficult matter of much
importance. The status of party wall in the case at bar is thus
established. There is no evidence of the circumstances under which
the party wall was erected, and we must presume that it was done by
the predecessor in title of the plaintiff below with the consent of
a grantor of the defendant below.
Plaintiff in error says that even if this be true, the effect of
the district regulations is equivalent to a statute, and deprives
him of his property without due process of law. The effect of
§§ 74 and 56 of those regulations is, shortly stated,
this: one of the two adjoining owners may build a two-story house
and a party wall 9 inches thick, occupying 4 1/2 inches of his
neighbor's land. If, thereafter, his neighbor wishes to build a
house of three stories, that neighbor is required to have his wall
13 inches thick. He can take down the existing party wall, but he
can occupy only 4 1/2 inches of the other's lot, and must pay all
the expenses of the change, including the damage done to the owner
of the two-story house, so that his party wall will be 8 1/2 inches
on his own land, while he uses but 4 1/2 inches of his neighbor's.
Or he can build a 9-inch wall against the two-story wall, and widen
his wall to 13 inches when it reaches the third story, resting on 4
1/2 inches of the original party wall on his own land. He thus is
compelled to occupy with his wall 13 inches of his own lot, and let
his neighbor have 4 1/2 inches of his land without corresponding
advantage.
Counsel for plaintiff in error urges that the fundamental idea
in the
Page 260 U. S. 452
institution of party walls is mutual benefit (
Smoot v.
Heyl, 227 U. S. 518,
227 U. S.
523), which implies equality of easement of support and
of occupation of land between the neighbors, and that to give to
the builder of the first wall such great advantage over his
neighbors as these regulations give him deprives his neighbor of
property without due process of law.
The questions thus raised might justify discussion if the
plaintiff in error were in a position to urge them, and had not
used the original party wall of which he complains. His contention
below was that he had not used the wall of his neighbor, that he
had built a new wall at the side of the original party wall as high
as the original wall and then had widened it to 13 inches so as to
extend over the original wall without resting on it. The jury found
against him on this issue. If he did use the original wall, then he
must pay for the value of the use.
Fowler v. Saks, 7
Mackey, 570, 581;
Fowler v. Koehler, 43 App.D.C. 349, 360.
In using it, he waived the right to object to the regulations with
which he complied without objection, until he was called upon to
pay his share of that which he had taken and used.
The judgment is affirmed.