GEO. A. HORMEL & COMPANY v. City of Winston-Salem

140 S.E.2d 362, 263 N.C. 666, 1965 N.C. LEXIS 1348
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 24, 1965
Docket443
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 140 S.E.2d 362 (GEO. A. HORMEL & COMPANY v. City of Winston-Salem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GEO. A. HORMEL & COMPANY v. City of Winston-Salem, 140 S.E.2d 362, 263 N.C. 666, 1965 N.C. LEXIS 1348 (N.C. 1965).

Opinion

*668 PARKER, J.

From 1942 until 1962 plaintiff occupied as tenant under lease and used as a manufacturing and distributing branch of its meat packing business parts of certain warehouse buildings in the city of Winston-Salem at 232 South Liberty Street Annex, erected and owned by Liberty Storage Company. C. H. Cherry, branch manager of plaintiff on 26 May I960, testified: “We occupied both the basement and the main floor of this second building and the one adjacent to it.”

This is a summary of the essential allegations of fact in its complaint, based on information and belief:

Many years ago defendant, or its predecessor the city of Winston or town of Salem, installed metal drainpipes for surface waters upon and through the premises owned by Liberty Storage Company, and after-wards leased by it to plaintiff, and covered the same with dirt, and that these pipes were furnished by defendant,, or by one or more of its predecessors the city of Winston or the town of Salem. This pipeline has from time to time been inspected and repaired by defendant.

Prior to the spring of 1958 this pipeline had been defective and inadequate so that water “busted out” of one or more manholes, and at such times defendant inspected it and made temporary repairs thereto. In the spring of 1958 defendant bolted and cemented a manhole on the premises occupied by one Lawrence Levy, trading as Lar Mel Displays, which premises are a short distance northwest of the premises occupied by plaintiff, to prevent surface waters from being forced up through a manhole into Levy's premises. When defendant bolted and cemented this manhole, its officers and agents discovered, or should have discovered, that the metal pipes of the drain were decomposed, rotten, and full of holes, and that dirt and rocks had washed or fallen into the pipes so that waters flowing into them would be blocked and cause the metal pipes “to give way” resulting in “washouts” and rendering the drain less adequate to carry off the surface waters of unusual or ordinary rains. With this knowledge defendant should have repaired or replaced these metal pipes.

Paragraph 9. “This plaintiff is further informed, advised and believes and so alleges that the defendant City of Winston-Salem had from time to time bottled more surface waters and channelled same into these drain pipes so that the volume of water passing through same was and had been gradually increasing for some time and because of the defective condition of said drain pipes, they were insufficient to take care of surface waters.”

These drainpipes were full of holes and weak, and consequently surface waters ran out of them and .washed the earth around them away, causing the metal pipes to collapse and earth to fall in them blocking the flow of surface water and causing the surface water to burst out *669 and damage its property, and such negligence on defendant’s part proximately caused its loss to its property.

Plaintiff alleges, not on information and belief, that on 26 May 1960, during a rain, the drain pipes gave way, collapsed, and the earth surrounding them filled and clogged the drainpipes to such an extent that the surface waters became blocked, causing further washouts, and the surface waters overran the drain, flowed into the building, and washed out the earth surrounding said pipes doing great damage to plaintiff’s property therein.

These essential allegations were denied by defendant in its answer.

Plaintiff in its complaint alleges, and defendant in its answer admits, that plaintiff, according to the requirements of defendant’s charter, filed a claim against defendant in apt time for its loss.

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show the following facts: Old Tar Branch in the city of Winston-Salem is a natural water course carrying water at all times. The upstream end of its watershed begins approximately at 5th Street and Trade Street in the city, and from thence the natural flow of water from its watershed is southwardly down this branch for about one-half to three-quarters of a mile, until the branch merges with Salem Creek west of South Main Street in the city. Waters from the east and west side of this branch within its watershed flow into it as a natural water course. The ground in the watershed area slopes north to south. As this branch flows southwardly, it passes through culverts under 4th, 3rd, 2nd, and 1st Streets, under Expressway 1-40, and under Brookstown Avenue. The defendant built and maintains the culverts through which the waters of this branch flow under its street rights-of-way. Feeder lines within the street rights-of-way situate in the Watershed of Old Tar Branch were built by the defendant, and the waters therein flow into Old Tar Branch.

North of Brookstown Avenue are the Winston-Salem Southbound Railway Company’s station, warehouse, and railway yards. Sometime prior to 1915, the railway built a culvert, running north 457% feet from Brookstown Avenue to a point where the south line of the buildings now occupied by plaintiff is located, to carry the waters of Old Tar Branch under its railway yard and tracks. Defendant has never maintained or repaired this culvert. At that time this branch north of this culvert was an open stream. This branch at present south of Brookstown Avenue is an open stream.

During the period 1925 to 1929 Liberty Storage Company installed on its property a 54-inch corrugated metal culvert or pipes, beginning at the north end of the railway culvert and running in a northwardly direction 425 feet to the north edge of its property, to carry the waters of Old Tar Branch. Defendant has never maintained or repaired this *670 metal culvert or pipes. About 1930 Liberty Storage Company built on its property over this metal culvert the buildings leased in part to plaintiff. On the extreme northern end of its property Liberty Storage Company erected over this metal culvert or pipes a two-story brick building, which is 196.25 feet from the northern end of the buildings leased in part by plaintiff, and which was occupied at the times here relevant by one Lawrence W. Levy, trading as Lar Mel Displays, as a tenant. This metal culvert or pipes terminated in a manhole, which defendant did not build, and which was within the building, which Levy after-wards leased. Liberty Storage Company — no date appears in the record — installed two 36-inch metal pipes which run northward from the manhole within the Levy building some 30 feet beyond the northern end of its property to a junction box. This junction box is about 4x8 feet across the top and 8 or 10 feet deep. The trial court found as a fact that Robert W. Neilson, director of public works for defendant and a witness for plaintiff, was a registered engineer, and held he was entitled to express an opinion as such. He expressed the opinion that the 54-inch metal culvert installed by Liberty Storage Company on its property was of sufficient size to carry off any water that came to it from the two 36-inch metal pipes installed by Liberty Storage Company. Defendant has never maintained or repaired these two 36-inch pipes.

From this junction box up to the source of Old Tar Branch near 4th Street, its waters flow through pipes built, maintained, and controlled by the property owners through whose lands it flows, except the parts under street rights-of-way.

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.E.2d 362, 263 N.C. 666, 1965 N.C. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geo-a-hormel-company-v-city-of-winston-salem-nc-1965.