Collier v. City of Memphis

4 Tenn. App. 322
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 18, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 322 (Collier v. City of Memphis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collier v. City of Memphis, 4 Tenn. App. 322 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The appeal in this case is from the final decree of the Chancellor in denying to complainants the injunctive relief sought by the original and the amended and supplemental bills and the dismissal of complainants suit; and from the decree of the Chancellor sustaining the cross-bill of the defendant City of Memphis and making perpetual the temporary injunction granted under the allegations of the cross-bill. Appellants have filed two sets of assignments of error. Under the first set of assignments of error, the first three assignments challenge the action of the Chancellor in refusing to accept and ordered filed the bill of executions alleged to have been tendered to the Chancellor by complainants within the time required. The other assignments of error under the first set of errors assigned *324 are substantially covered, by the second set of assigned errors, which it is stated by appellants are based solely upon the “technical record,” and independent of the bill of exceptions.

The original bill alleges that complainants are the owners of certain lands in the City of Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee, known as “the N. M. Trezevant Sub-division of lands,” with certain exceptions set out in the bill. The original bill alleges that the City of Memphis acquired the tract of land of about 160 acres, which it now uses for the Tri-State Fair Grounds and under the control of the Memphis Park Commission; that in the summer of 1922 a swimming pool was built and put into operation as a municipal swimming pool by the City of Memphis, which swimming pool covers a considerable area and holds about 1,500,000 gallons of water, and that said swimming pool is drained every Saturday night, and that also public baths are operated in connection with the swimming pool in which a large quantity of water is used and which flows continuously from the shower baths used by the public. It is alleged that when this swimming pool and baths were erected and put into operation and made free to the public that the only means of carrying off the water emptied from the swimming pool weekly and from the baths regularly is an underground culvert, leading from the swimming pool and bath rooms to the northwest corner of the Tri-State Fair Grounds, emptying into an open drainage ditch running through the center of East Parkway at the intersection of Central avenue; then following in a northerly direction through said open ditch, and carried by a culvert under the roadbed of East Parkway, and there falling upon and over the premises of complainants; that as the result a surface drainage canal of varying length and depth now exists on the lands and premises of complainants, and extending across the lands and property of complainants to the northwest corner. It is ehai'ged in the bill that this water from the municipal swimming pool and the baths is polluted because of its use by the many bathers using the swimming pool and bath, and has also polluted the atmosphere in the vicinity of this open ditch or surface drainage; that the lands of ■ complainants through which this open ditch passes are used for the pasturing of dairy cattle, and that considerable areas of the lands have grown up in weeds, and infected pools have formed which become stagnant and affords breeding places for mosquitoes through this open ditch and its course across the premises of complainants and beyond. It is alleged that this constitutes a nuisance, and has resulted and will result in great and irreparable damage to the property of complainants, and that such use of said open ditch and canal across the lands of complainants by the City- of Memphis is a trespass, and is unwarranted and illegal.

*325 There are other allegations contained in the original bill, and especially with reference to certain other drainage ditches or canals wrongfully and unlawfully used by the City of Memphis and to the irreparable injury and damage of complainants. But the assignments of error and the briefs filed in support thereof by appellants are directed especially to the wrongful use of the drainage ditch into which the swimming pool and baths referred to are emptied.

The original and supplemental bills filed in this cause by complainants allege other matters which we deem unnecessary to consider under the assignments of error and questions made on this appeal.

The defendant, the City of Memphis, filed a demurrer to the original bill, setting forth several grounds, and also filed an answer. It is unnecesary to consider the demurrer as the Chancellor disposed of the case on the bills and answers and the evidence, including the verdict of the jury on the issues of fact presented by the pleadings, which issues of fact were made up under the direction of the Chancellor and submitted to the jury, which jury had been called for by the complainants.

The answer of the defendants to the original bill admits that it is advised and informed that the complainants are the owners of certain property composing a part of the Trezevant Sub-division lying east of the Parkway, but does not admit that the same is correctly described in the bill. The answer avers that all of the property of complainants described in the original bill is within the city limits of the City of Memphis. It admits the allegations in the bill with reference to the donation or dedication by complainants to the City of Memphis of the strip of ground 100 feet wide extending along the east side of Trezevant avenue between Madison avenue and Central avenue, or so much thereof as complainants then owned, but that the dedication of said strip of ground was made by complainants for the purpose of enhancing and making more valuable the contiguous property of complainants. It is stated in the answer that at the timle said property was (dedicated to the city for said street or avenue purposes by the complainants and other owners who made similar dedications at the same time, that there then existed natural drainage ditches along the east and west sides of Trezevant avenue, running north from in .front of the present Tri-State Fair Grounds, then known as Montgomery Park, and that the ditch on the east side of Trezevant avenue was the main open ditch, and the smaller ditch was on the west side which crossed the avenue under a culvert and emptied into the larger ditch which ran down the east side of Treze-vant avenue; that this system of natural drainage had existed for a great number of years and that the city in constructing the parkway, as was contemplated by all parties, left this natural drainage in the same location on the east side of Trezevant avenue, which was *326 then the center of the east Parkway ,at that point. The answer denies that the city had altered or changed the course of the natural drainage by its street improvements, except by-running other lateral drainage into this ditch which was not only necessary but in contemplation of all the parties for the proper improvement of the parkway, streets and drives, and that this occurred more than twenty years before the filing of the bill in this cause.

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Related

Shelton v. Hickman
172 S.W.2d 9 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collier-v-city-of-memphis-tennctapp-1927.