
    INJUNCTION AGAINST ONE CLAIMING BY ADVERSE TITLE.
    [Circuit Court of Hamilton County.]
    George W. Harding v. Lyman Perin, Jr., et al.
    Decided, June 28, 1904.
    
      Title—One in Possession Entitled to an Injunction—Against an Adverse Claimant, When—Remedy at Law—Trespass Amounting to Waste.
    
    Where a plaintiff is in possession of property which the defendant claims by adverse title, and the defendant is threatening acts which will tend to the destruction of the estate, the prayer of the plaintiff for an injunction will be granted until such time as the defendant establishes his title by an action at law.
    
      Giffen, J.; Jelke, P. J., and Swing, J., concur.
    The plaintiff claims to be the owner and in possession of a lot of ground situated in the city of Cincinnati, on which there is a brick building and warehouse, and that the defendants threaten to take possession of the west wall thereof, remove the support of the roof, and thereby cause the entire roof to fall to the ground, all to the great and irreparable injury of the plaintiff. The defendants claim title to the premises, but admit that the plaintiff is in possession. The only question to be determined is whether the plaintiff is entitled to an injunction until the disputed question of title can be determined at law. In High on Injunctions, 698, it is said:
    “Where the party aggrieved is in possession, he will be allowed to restrain such trespasses as would result in irreparable damage in the event of refusing the relief.”
    And in the case of Boss v. Page, 6 O. S., 166, cited by counsel for the defendant, the same doctrine is recognized. The court say:
    “Where the trespass amounts to waste, going to the destruction of the estate, and producing an injury for which pecuniary compensation can not be made, chancery may be called upon for its aid to stay the mischief by injunction.”
    In Lownds v. Bettle, 33 L. J. Ch., 451, the distinction between the acts done by a stranger and by one claiming title is clearly set forth as follows:
    “Where, therefore, the plaintiff is in possession, and the person doing the acts complained of is an utter stranger, not claiming under color of right, the tendency of the court is not to grant an injunction, unless there are special circumstances, but to leave the plaintiff to his remedy at law, though where the acts tend to the destruction of the estate, the court will grant it. But where the party in possession seeks to restrain one who claims by adverse title, there the tendency will be to grant the injunction, at least where the acts done either did or might tend to the destruction of the estate.”
    In the case before us, the plaintiff is in possession; the defendants claim by adverse title, and the acts threatened will tend to the destruction of the estate, The defendants have a remedy by ejectment, and until they establish their title by an action at law, we are of the opinion that the. tearing down of the building and the destruction of the estate should be enjoined.
     