Baer v. Board of County Commissioners

257 A.2d 201, 255 Md. 163, 1969 Md. LEXIS 695
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 9, 1969
Docket[No. 384, September Term, 1968.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 257 A.2d 201 (Baer v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baer v. Board of County Commissioners, 257 A.2d 201, 255 Md. 163, 1969 Md. LEXIS 695 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

Singley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1966, Mr. and Mrs. Baer bought a lot on Woodburn Drive in Orchard Grove, a residential district north of Hagerstown. After they completed construction of a house on the lot, they discovered that surface water was accumulating in their rear yard after heavy rains. Convinced that this condition was caused by drainage pipes which the Board of County Commissioners of Washington County (the County) had installed in 1958, the Baers sought injunctive relief in an action brought against the County in the Circuit Court for Washington County. From an order dismissing their bill, the Baers have appealed.

The facts of the case could be more readily understood had the Baers taken the trouble of introducing into evidence a map capable of reproduction here. From the tes *165 timony and the exhibits, it would appear that the lot which the Baers bought is on the west side of Woodburn Drive at the intersection of Blue Ridge Road, in an area lying generally east of a local country club, the club having located there before development of the adjoining residential area was commenced. The land falls gradually from the country club in the direction of Wood-burn Drive and the Baer lot. Immediately to the rear of the Baer lot (but separated from the Baer lot by a 20 foot reservation, retained by the developers for a possible future alley) is a lot owned by William E. Beyard, fronting on Fountain Head Road, a road which parallels Woodburn Drive and lies generally to the west. On the west side of Fountain Head Road, opposite the Beyard lot, is property now owned by Arnold D. Staubs.

Sometime after 1950, when Fountain Head Road was laid out, water flowing from the country club property toward the east commenced to accumulate on the-property now owned by Staubs. There is no dispute that the County alleviated this condition by installing a pipe under Fountain Head Road, so that the water was discharged on the lot now owned by Beyard. When Beyard built his house in 1956, he extended the pipe across his lot in a generally easterly direction toward the lot now owned by the Baers.

In about 1958, after water again commenced to accumulate on the Staubs property, the County installed two catch basins on the west side of Fountain Head Road, and two additional catch basins on the east side of Fountain Head Road appear to have been installed by Mr. Funkhouser, whose lot adjoins Beyard’s. The County then removed Beyard’s pipe, and installed two pipes which run along Beyard's northeasterly lot line and terminate at the 20 foot strip between the Beyard and Baer lots. Through these pipes apparently runs the water from the catch basins and the Staubs property.

Baer testified that when he purchased the lot in 1966, it was heavily wooded. He was aware of the drainage problem, but when he examined the lot after heavy rains, *166 he saw no accumulation. Incident to the construction of the Baer house, some trees and underbrush were removed, and substantial quantities of water commenced to accumulate after heavy rains along Baer’s rear lot line, and slowly drained into Woodburn Drive at a low point at the southeast corner of Baer’s lot.

The purpose of the Baers’ suit was to enjoin the County from discharging water from the two pipes which empty at the 20 foot reservation along their rear lot line. The parties stipulated that the owners of the reservation would permit the County to extend the pipes along the reservation to the southwestern boundary of the Baers’ property. The Baers would permit the County to run the pipes to the southeastern corner of their lot and empty into Woodburn Drive. This solution was aborted when the lower court dismissed the Baers’ bill of complaint.

On appeal, the Baers concede that an owner of lower land cannot obstruct the natural flow of surface water from higher land but argue that the chancellor, in denying relief because there was no evidence of “increased flow” or “change of flow,” failed to take into account the undisputed evidence that by installing the pipes, the County had canalized or concentrated at one point on the Baers’ lot, water which might never have reached the lot by natural flow.

In Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore R.R. Co. v. Davis, 68 Md. 281, 11 A. 822, 6 Am. St. Rep. 440 (1888) this Court aligned itself with the American states which had adopted the civil law rule with respect to surface waters:

“[T]hat the owner of the upper land has a right to the uninterrupted flowage of the water caused by falling rain and melting snow, and that the proprietor of the lower land, to which the water naturally descends, has no right to make embankments whereby the current may be arrested and accumulated on the property of his neighbor. This is the rule of the civil law, ap *167 parently founded on the principles of justice, and said to be ‘received with constantly increasing favor in the United States.’ [citing cases].” 68 Md. at 289.

It has been suggested that the rule follows the common law maxim regarding water courses: Aqua currit et debet currere, ut currere solebat. 1 For a consideration of the civil law and common law rules and the almost equal division of authority see 6A American Law of Property § 28.63 (A.J. Casner ed. 1954) at 188 and Kinyon and McClure, Interferences tvith Surface Waters, 24 Minn. L. Rev. 891 (1940).

The later Maryland cases have consistently applied the civil law rule. Baltimore & Sparrows Point R.R. Co. v. Hackett, 87 Md. 224, 39 A. 510 (1898); City Dairy Co. v. Scott, 129 Md. 548, 100 A. 295 (1916); Neubauer v. Overlea Realty Co., 142 Md. 87, 120 A. 69 (1923); Eisenstein v. Annapolis, 177 Md. 222, 9 A. 2d 224 (1939); Whitman v. Forney, 181 Md. 652, 31 A. 2d 630 (1943); Biberman v. Funkhouser, 190 Md. 424, 58 A. 2d 668 (1948); Bishop v. Richard, 193 Md. 6, 65 A. 2d 334 (1949); Hancock v. Stull, 206 Md. 117, 110 A. 2d 522 (1955); Baltimore County v. Hunter, 207 Md. 171, 113 A. 2d 910 (1955); Battisto v. Perkins, 210 Md. 542, 124 A. 2d 288 (1956); Kennedy-Chamberlin Dev. Co. v. Snure, 212 Md. 369, 129 A. 2d 142 (1957); Sainato v. Potter, 222 Md. 263, 159 A. 2d 632 (1960); Kidwell v. Bay Shore Dev. Corp., 232 Md. 577, 194 A. 2d 809 (1963). See also Note, Drainage of Surface Waters Under the Civil Law Rule as Applied in Maryland, 11 Md.L.Rev. 58 (1950).

Beginning in 1943 with the opinion in Whitman v. Forney, supra, and repeated in 1948 in Biberman v. Funkhouser, supra, what began as an intimation that the civil law rule should be qualified by reasonableness has *168 developed into a limitation which is a rule of law in all but name: Hancock v. Stull; Battisto v. Perkins; Kennedy-Chamberlin Dev. Co. v. Snure; Sainato v. Potter, all supra; Note,

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Bluebook (online)
257 A.2d 201, 255 Md. 163, 1969 Md. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baer-v-board-of-county-commissioners-md-1969.