| John Leybourn Goddard - 1877 - 504 Seiten
...court of law, will interfere on the mere ground of invasion of privacy ; and a party has a right even to open new windows, although he is thereby enabled to overlook his neighbour's premises, and so interfering, perhaps, with his comfort" (a). So, again, in an old case of Cfumdler v. Thompson (6),... | |
| Banister Fletcher - 1879 - 158 Seiten
...the rental value is most seriously depreciated. That my reader may be certain this view is correct, I quote from Mr. Homersham Cox, MA, who, in his legal...a railway embankment and overlooking the house (Re diaries Penny and the South Eastern Railway Company, 7 E. & B. 666 ; 26 LJ, QB 225). It will therefore... | |
| Banister Fletcher - 1886 - 186 Seiten
...from Mr. Homersham Cox, MA, who, in Ms legal work on this subject, gives Vice-Chancellor Kindersley'e words in Turner v. Spooner (30 LJ, Ch. 801) : " No...on a railway embankment and overlooking the house (Be Charles Penny and the South-Eastern Railway Company, 7 E. & B. 666 ; 26 LJ, QB 225). It will therefore... | |
| Stephen Martin Leake - 1888 - 662 Seiten
...windows to overlook his land. " The Court will not interfere on the mere ground of invasion of privacy; a party has a right to open new windows, although...overlook his neighbour's premises, and so interfere with his comfort." A person can protect the privacy of his land only by building upon Compensation... | |
| Ratanlal Ranchhoddas, Dhirajlal Keshavlal Thakore - 1905 - 622 Seiten
...Court of law, will interfere on the mere ground of invasion of privacy ; and a party has a right even to open new windows, although he is thereby enabled to overlook his neighbour's premises, and (1) Thorpe v. Brvmfitt, 8 Ch. App. 660. (3) Baij Nath T. Tetai Chowdhary, 6 CWN 197. (3) Srtku v. Ibrahim,... | |
| Banister Fletcher - 1908 - 242 Seiten
...of the above we quote Vice-Chancellor Kindersley's words in Turner v. tfpooner (1 Dr. and Sin., 407; 30 LJ. Ch., 801): " No doubt the owner of a house...A house is not " injuriously affected," within the moaning of the sixty-eighth section of the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act, by the annoyance of people... | |
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