County Commissioners of Baltimore County v. Hunter

113 A.2d 910, 207 Md. 171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1993
Docket[No. 93, October Term, 1954.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 113 A.2d 910 (County Commissioners of Baltimore County v. Hunter) 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
County Commissioners of Baltimore County v. Hunter, 113 A.2d 910, 207 Md. 171 (Md. 1993).

Opinion

Brune C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, the County Commissioners of Baltimore County (the “County”) and the Fivak Corporation, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, as upper landowners, to enjoin the appellees, Herbert T. Hunter and Johanna T. Hunter, his wife, as lower landowners, from obstructing an open drainage ditch. The appellees filed an answer denying the obstruction, and they also filed a cross-bill praying that the County and the Fivak Corporation be enjoined from the excessive discharge and channeling of water and debris on to the property of the appellees. The Circuit Court entered a decree dismissing the original bill of complaint and granting the relief requested in the cross-bill. The County appealed from this decree; Fivak Corporation did not.

The appellees are the fee simple owners of the property known as 12 Maple Avenue, Catonsville, Baltimore County, Maryland. Mr. Hunter has resided on the property since his marriage to Mrs. Hunter, who owned the *175 property since 1943. Mrs. Hunter, however, has lived on this property since 1940 and has been a lifelong resident in the immediate vicinity. The property fronts on the west side of Maple Avenue and extends westward to the east bank of a stream which is used by the County and others for storm drainage and sewage disposal. The northern boundary of the Hunter property in part runs along the southern or rear boundaries of properties owned by the Fivak Corporation and by the County. The County property also fronts on the Frederick Road. To the east of the County lot and between it and Maple Avenue are the Fitzpatrick and Farnandis lots.

The evidence showed that prior to 1926 there was a water course which carried storm water from a drainage area of approximately 45 acres on either side of Frederick Road, a state highway, along the south side in front of the swimming pool property now owned by the Fivak Corporation. At that time the water course was a deep ditch which ran along Frederick Road from a point west of Maple Avenue, at which there was located a box culvert, to a stream west of the swimming pool property which collected drainage and sewage. The evidence was not clear as to who had constructed the culvert, which runs beneath Frederick Road, but responsibility for its maintenance apparently rests upon the State Roads Commission.

In 1926 when the Five Oaks swimming pool was built the above mentioned water course was relocated and channeled in a new direction. It continued to enter the same stream, but at a different point. The relocated water course took a southwesterly direction from the box culvert located just west of Maple Avenue and flowed across what are now the Farnandis, Fitzpatrick, County, Fivak and, finally, Hunter properties. The testimony of Mrs. Hunter showed that (at least since the 1926 diversion) this has been the natural course of drainage into the stream which runs past the western boundaries of the Hunter and Fivak properties.

In 1930 the County built a pumping station on its lot which adjoins what is now the Fivak Corporation’s *176 swimming pool property. Both a regular sanitary sewer and an overflow pipe from a manhole near the pumping station reach the stream to the west of the Fivak and Hunter properties without going through the Hunter property. It appears (though the evidence is not so clear as one might wish) that neither the regular sanitary sewer line nor the overflow pipe contributes to the damage to the Hunter property, of which the Hunters complain. They ascribe their troubles to the storm water drain; but the situation is somewhat complicated, because of there being some sewage matter which gets into the storm water drain and comes down through it onto the Hunter property. The source of such material is not established.

Until about 1950 there appears ‘to have been little change in the surface water drainage or in the amount thereof. Mrs. Hunter described the water course prior to 1950 as a ditch “about 18 inches wide and about 12 inches deep,” which ran across the rear of her property, and Mr. Hunter’s testimony showed it to have been slightly wider on the County property but not so deep. Throughout the period from 1926 to 1950 the ditch carried storm waters from an area of 45 acres on either side of Frederick Road. These waters marged at or near the box culvert just west of Maple Avenue.

In 1950 the County made improvements on its pumping station property. It placed a 36-inch pipe in the ditch above described and extended this large pipe through the Fitzpatrick and Farnandis properties to the box culvert just west of Maple Avenue. Also, it constructed an open drain made of rock set in cement in the. ditch beginning at the outlet of the 36-inch pipe at the edge of the County lot and extending approximately 60 feet over the Fivak property to the rear of the Hunter property, where it led into the ditch across the Hunter property which finally emptied into the sewage stream. In addition, the County built a road on its property and paved the rear of its lot, so what was formerly a marshy area could be used as a storage yard. There was also evidence that the County had covered over gutters ■ on *177 either side of Frederick Road as more houses were built in the area, and that all of this water was carried into the big 36-inch pipe. These changes do not appear to have enlarged the drainage area from which storm water flowed over the Hunter property.

Prior to 1950, when the County made improvements, the Hunters had used the rear of their property as pasture for horses but after the installation of the 36-inch pipe by the County the Hunters said that they no longer could do so because the rear of their property became polluted and littered by glass, debris, and sewage matter, and this rendered it unfit for livestock. Mr. Hunter also testified that coincident with the installation of the underground drain pipes there was an increase in the volume of water and debris, and that the ditch across the rear of the Hunter property was increased in size by the washing away of soil from 18 inches by 12 inches to 5 or 6 feet in width by 5 feet in depth.

The Hunters erected two concrete posts on their property about 5 feet apart and installed a grating between them to prevent debris and other matter from flowing through the ditch onto their property. Debris collected in the ditch behind the grating and water became backed up on the Fivak and County properties. Also, some of the debris washed over the grating or around it onto the Hunter property and some soil was washed away.

Mr. Meinl, president of the Fivak Corporation, testified that his corporation purchased the swimming pool property in March, 1949, and that at some time thereafter the part of the parking lot through which the ditch flows was recindered. The wooden floor of the bath house near the parking area was replaced with a concrete floor. Mr. Meinl stated that there was a back flow of water from the ditch over the parking area.

There was also testimony that within the past five or six years before the trial the whole front of the swimming pool property along the Frederick Road had been paved with asphalt topping. Further testimony showed that the trolley tracks in the bed of the Frederick Road *178

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Bluebook (online)
113 A.2d 910, 207 Md. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-commissioners-of-baltimore-county-v-hunter-md-1993.