City Dairy Co. v. Scott

100 A. 295, 129 Md. 548, 1916 Md. LEXIS 179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 A. 295 (City Dairy Co. v. Scott) 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
City Dairy Co. v. Scott, 100 A. 295, 129 Md. 548, 1916 Md. LEXIS 179 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

*549 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The declaration in this case alleges that the plaintiff was 1he owner of the leasehold interest in the house and property in Baltimore City known as Ho. 2797 Remington avenue; that in the years 1914 and 1915, the defendant, The City Dairy Company, a corporation, unlawfully diverted a certain stream of water “that ran eastward on Twenty-eighth street, adjoining the plaintiff’s property, * * * carrying the surface and house drainage from ihe area and buildings in the block bounded by Remington avenue, Twenty-eighth street, Huntington avenue, Twenty-ninth street and the adjoining neighborhood,” and that by reason thereof the said stream, instead of running past the plaintiff’s property, “as before the unlawful acts of the defendant,” was caused “to run upon and empty into the promises of the plaintiff,” whereby the plaintiff’s property was greatly damaged, and that in consequence thereof her tenants gave ftp their lease and she was unable to rent the property.

The defendant interposed the plea that it did not commit the wrong alleged, and during the trial, which resulted in the judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $300.00 from which this appeal was taken, the defendant reserved five exceptions to the rejection of certain evidence offered by it, and one exception to the rulings of the Court below on the prayers and on motions to strike out evidence produced by the plaintiff and admitted subject to exception.

The property of the plaintiff is at the corner of Remington avenue and Twenty-eighth street, spoken of in the evidence as the northeast comer. Remington avenue runs northwest and southeast, and is crossed by Twenty-eighth street at right-angles. These streets were not paved, and for a number of years prior to the acts of the defendant' complained of, the drainage from Remington and Huntington avenues, northwest of Twenty-eighth street, and from Twenty-eighth street, west of Remington avenue, flowed, as shown by the photographs offered in evidence and produced at the argument of *550 the case in this Court, in a well-defined stream, in a northeasterly direction on Twenty-eighth street, past the plaintiff’s property, to the rear of her lot, and ultimately found its way into a pool or pond located between Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth streets, several hundred feet east of Remington avenue and plaintiff’s lot.

The grade of Remington avenue and Twenty-ninth street, and the land north of Twentyminth street was much higher than the lot on which the pool was located, and there is evidence tending to show that water from a spring thereon, and the surface water or drainage on that lot, and over that lot from the adjoining land to the northwest, formerly flowed cither into pools or ponds on or adjoining the lot and from those ponds or pools into S'umwalt Run, which flowed in a southeasterly direction through a ravine just east of the lot, or directly into Sumwalt Run.

In 1908 the City constructed a storm water drain or sewer eight foot in diameter, following the course of Sumwalt Run, “as a tunnel for that stream and tributary drainage,” in which there were two “openings” or “inlets,” of twenty-four inch terra cotta pipe, on the north side of the sewer, which “took care of the drainage” that formerly flowed into Sumwalt Run. One of these openings was east of the lot on which the pool was located, and the other was southeast of the intersection of Twenty-eighth street and Remington avenue. After the construction of this drain or sewer by the City, various persons commenced to fill up the ravine from Twenty-sixth street towards Twenty-eighth street, and the evidence shows that prior to the filing of the ravine east of Twenty-eighth street, the drainage on Twenty-eighth street flowed in a southeasterly direction towards Sumwalt Run Twenty-eighth street and Remington avenue.

„ In January, 1914, the defendant purchased the lot. on which the pool was located and also a larger parcel of land just noi’th of 29th street and east of Remington avenue. *551 After it acquired the property, the defendant was notified by the Health Department that the pool referred to constituted a nuisance and that the defendant would have¡ to abate' the nuisance. In August, 1914-, the defendant, when grading its lot north of 29th street, moved a large quantity of earth across 29th street and dumped it on its lot south of 29th street, filling up the lot and the pool.

The plaintiff offered evidence, tending' to show that the filling up of defendant’s lot obstructed the flow of the. stream in question over the defendant’s lot to the pool,-and that at times of heavy rains the drainage that- flowed on 28th street and from 28th street over the land to the rear of her lot, was forced back upon her lot and into her house to f lie depth of several feet, thereby injuring’ her property and causing her to lose her tenants.

The defense in this case, as presented by the defendant’s prayers, is based upon two theories: (11 That the varr. alleges in effect that the stream diverted by the defendant was a natural stream, which carried with it surface and house drainage, and that there is no evidence' in the case to establish the existence of such a stream. (2) That unless iho drainage, on 28th street, in flowing upon the lot of the defendant, followed its natural course according to the natural slope of the; ground, or had been allowed to flow over the defendant’s lot for twenty years or more before the obstruction of the same by the defendant, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

The first, of those contentions, and the further contention that there is no evidence in the case to show that the drainage in question followed its natural course, or that it ha.d flowed over the defendant’s lot for twenty years or more before the alleged obst motion thereof, is presented by the defend ant’s first prayer, which asserts that under the pleadings there is no evidence in the case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover1.

*552 The narr. alleges that the defendant diverted a “certain stream of water that ran eastward on Twenty-eighth street, * * * said stream carrying the surface and house drainage from the area and buildings in the block bounded by Remington avenue,” etc. It does not state the source or origin of the stream, or that it included any water other than the “surface and house drainage” referred to. According to Webster’s New International Dictionary, a stream is “a current or course of water or other fluid, flowing on the earth, as a river, brook, etc., or from a vessel, reservoir or fountain; * * * any course of running water.” In Mitchell v. Bain, 42 N. E. 230, the Supreme Court of Indiana said: “A water course is a stream of water1 having a'bed, sides and banks, and the water need not flow continually. * * * Even surface water becomes a natural water course at the point where it begins, to form a reasonably well-defined channel, with bed and banks, or sides and current,, although the stream itself may be very small, and the water may not. flow continuously.” In P., W. & B. R. R. v. Davis, 68 Md. 281.

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Bluebook (online)
100 A. 295, 129 Md. 548, 1916 Md. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-dairy-co-v-scott-md-1916.