Beane v. Prince George's County

315 A.2d 777, 20 Md. App. 383, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 474
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 8, 1974
Docket346, September Term, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 315 A.2d 777 (Beane v. Prince George's County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beane v. Prince George's County, 315 A.2d 777, 20 Md. App. 383, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 474 (Md. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Moore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This matter is before us on the appeal of Eugene Beane, Sr., et ux., plaintiffs below, from an Order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County (Judge Robert B. Mathias) granting them limited injunctive relief against Prince George’s County following a hearing which was mandated by the Court of Appeals in Beane, et ux. v. McMullen, et al., 265 Md. 585, 291 A. 2d 37 (1972). A cross appeal filed by Prince George’s County, co-defendant below, from that Order was dismissed by this Court as not timely filed under Rule 1035 b(3).

The subject matter of this appeal, as it was in part of the prior case, is the improvement of a portion of Sansbury *386 Road in Prince George’s County by the Prince George’s County Department of Public Works and the subsequent installation of catch basins and a 24 inch corrugated metal drainage pipe extending from the intersection of Sansbury Road and Ritchie-Marlboro Road in a westerly direction approximately 450 feet along the south side of Ritchie-Marlboro Road past four residences and onto the property of the Beanes, where it terminated in an outfall 40 feet inside their property. From there the water drained into the roadbed of the abandoned Forestville-Oak Grove Public Road roughly separating the properties of the Beanes and their neighbors, the McMullens, until it passed through a pipe under Fernwood Road which forms the western boundary of the Beane property. 1

The trial court on remand conducted a prehearing conference and thereafter heard testimony of seven witnesses and received in excess of thirty exhibits. The testimony was transcribed and the court subsequently filed a comprehensive 46-page Opinion and Order. However, the injunctive relief provided in the Order was substantially the same as that from which the original appeal was taken, namely, that the 40 foot portion of the offending pipe be removed from the Beane property so that the outfall would be at the common boundary line of the Beanes and McMullens. For the reasons set forth below, it is our determination that the appellants are entitled to something more at the hands of the County and that the case for equitable relief must again be remanded for determination of a solution that will be fair to both parties. Cf. Turner v. Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, 221 Md. 494, 158 A. 2d 125 (1959).

The perimeter of our inquiry into the merits of the present appeal was drawn by the Court of Appeals in Beane. There the Beanes initially sued their neighbors, the McMullens, for alleged invasion of privacy, unlawful interference with the plaintiffs’ business and slander of title. The Beanes later *387 joined the Board of County Commissioners of Prince George’s County as an additional party defendant after the McMullens filed a counterclaim alleging water damage to their property caused by actions of the Beanes. The latter also filed a counterclaim against the McMullens and the County Commissioners, alleging that the Commissioners and their agents, servants and employees with the help and assistance of the McMullens did “unlawfully, willfully and wrongfully and without just excuse collect various surface waters” which did not naturally flow onto and upon the Beane property into a man-made drainage ditch and pipe, casting the water upon the Beane land, causing great damage and loss of use of the Beane property. In addition to damages, the Beanes sought an injunction against the County Commissioners prohibiting the County “from further allowing unnatural surface water to flow on the lands of the plaintiffs.” They elected a jury trial of their counterclaim. At the conclusion of the testimony the Circuit Court, Mathias, J., directed a verdict in favor of the McMullens on all three counts of the Beanes’ declaration and counterclaim against them. The McMullens’ counterclaim against the Beanes and that of the Beanes against the County Commissioners were submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict against the McMullens on their counterclaim and in favor of the Beanes against the County Commissioners for $2,000.

What transpired next is recounted by Judge Barnes, writing for the Court of Appeals, p. 598:

“After the verdict, the lower court considered the matter of injunctive relief in chambers and orally decided initially to deny that relief. Later, the lower court, on its own motion, decided to have a further hearing in regard to injunctive relief because of a lack of a survey and topographical study of the land below the drainage pipe in question. The Beanes objected to this procedure, relying upon the finality of the verdict of the jury on the question of liability of the County and the consequent need for injunctive relief, and further because of the lack of *388 any motion by any of the parties for the taking of additional testimony on the merits.
“At the further hearing a plat prepared for the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission by an unidentified firm was offered in evidence by the County Commissioners; and its admission into evidence was strenuously objected to by counsel for the Beanes. It was, however, received into evidence and the lower court construed it to contain facts contrary to the facts upon which the jury based its verdict. The lower court declined to grant the full injunctive relief prayed for by the Beanes, but did require the County Commissioners to remove so much of the offending pipe as was on the Beane property. The Beanes filed timely appeals from all adverse rulings. No cross-appeal was filed by the County Commissioners.” (Emphasis added.).

The Court of Appeals affirmed the actions of the trial court except with respect to the sufficiency of the injunctive relief. As to this, it held that the lower court, contrary to a contention by the Beanes, had not abused its discretion in taking additional testimony in regard to the practical manner in which injunctive relief might be fashioned. It pointed out, however, that the court in fashioning injunctive relief was not at liberty to disregard, as it had, “the premises already established by the jury verdict and judgment,” for Rule BF 43, entitled “Equitable Principles Applicable to Claim for Injunction,”

“does not mean that in considering injunctive relief ancillary to the action at law, the trial court is to proceed as if the granting of injunctive relief were a matter de novo in equity with the right to the trial judge to disregard or reach conclusions contrary to the factual matters already determined by the jury. In short, the jury’s factual findings either upon a special verdict or inherent in a general verdict are conclusive in regard to those facts as if the trial court sitting as a trier of fact *389 had so found. If it be concluded that the jury had no substantial evidence upon which to reach its verdict, the remedy is by the granting of a judgment n.o.v. If there were other deficiencies in the verdict, a new trial could be granted. In the present case the trial court properly we think, declined to grant the County’s motion for a judgment

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Bluebook (online)
315 A.2d 777, 20 Md. App. 383, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beane-v-prince-georges-county-mdctspecapp-1974.