Giant Food, Inc. v. Washington-Rockville Industrial Park, Inc.

253 A.2d 867, 254 Md. 100, 1969 Md. LEXIS 853
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 4, 1969
DocketNo. 265
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 A.2d 867 (Giant Food, Inc. v. Washington-Rockville Industrial Park, Inc.) 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
Giant Food, Inc. v. Washington-Rockville Industrial Park, Inc., 253 A.2d 867, 254 Md. 100, 1969 Md. LEXIS 853 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case may be cited as an illustration of one of the problems that arises when our land is converted from its natural state into urban uses.

Appellee Parklawn, Inc. (Parklawn), developer of a large commercial cemetery in Montgomery County near Rockville, sued Appellee Washington-Rockville Industrial Park, Inc. (Industrial Park) and forty other defendants. This action was Law No. 15991 in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. In the first count Parklawn claimed that Industrial Park, as “the owner, seller and developer of property adjacent to that of the plaintiff” “has since 1962 continuously graded, paved and otherwise removed natural ground cover from the property it was developing * * * in such a manner as to copiously increase the [102]*102run-off of water, dirt, silt and debris onto the land of plaintiff”, that “defendants 1 were negligent in failing to take, and failing to have their agents, engineers, contractors and builders take reasonable precautions against the forseeable consequences of their acts, and of maintaining a nuisance which is continuing to cause plaintiff damage and loss of valuable cemetery land”, and that Industrial Park, although advised of the consequences of its acts, had “failed and refused to take any proper remedy or to otherwise accept responsibility for its acts”, the nuisance created “continuing unabated”. Parklawn asked for damages of $5,500,000.00 together with interest and costs, and as ancillary relief, an injunction requiring this defendant to change the dispersal and flow of the water from its Industrial Park so as to prevent the wrongful concentration and continued discharge of dirt, debris, and silt on plaintiff’s land, together with an injunction restraining this defendant from further denuding the land without proper precautions.

In the second count Parklawn sued the other forty defendants contending that they were “the owners, lessors, and improvers of property near the property of plaintiff” and that “since 1962” defendants had “built upon and otherwise developed their property for their economic benefit from its natural state and into an industrial and commercial complex and use, in such a manner as to copiously increase the run-off of water, dirt, silt and debris onto the land of plaintiff”, that “defendants were negligent in failing to take, and in failing to have their agents, engineers, contractors and builders take reasonable precautions against the foreseeable consequences of their acts and have maintained a nuisance which is continuing to cause plaintiff damage and loss of valuable cemetery land”, that “defendants have been advised of the consequences of their acts, but have failed and refused to take any proper remedy or to otherwise accept responsibility for their acts”, the damage created continu[103]*103ing unabated. Parklawn also asked for damages in the amount of $5,500,000.00 in that count together with similar ancillary relief by way of injunction.

The above mentioned suit was filed on September 22, 1964. On June 7, 1965, Parklawn filed a suit against Filderman Corporation and appellant Giant Food, Inc. (Giant Food). Count one was a suit against Filderman Corporation with basically the same contentions as appeared in count one of the prior suit except for its language that “[t]his defendant, as well as the defendants in Law No. 15991, filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Maryland”, were “negligent individually severally and/or jointly”, etc., with an identical prayer for damages and ancillary relief. In the second count, Giant Food was the defendant, there being an allegation that it was the developer of property adjacent to that of Parklawn and that it “as well as the defendant in Law No. 15991, was negligent individually severally and/or jointly in failing to take and failing to have its agents” etc. “take reasonable precautions”, as alleged in count two of the prior suit, with a prayer for damages and ancillary relief by way of an injunction identical with that in count two of the first suit.

On September 9, 1965, Parklawn dismissed with prejudice its action against twenty-four defendants. An order of dismissal as to appellee Chevy Chase Motor Company, Inc., was filed on December 20, 1966. Summary judgment was entered in favor of two defendants and this action was affirmed on appeal by this Court. See Parklawn v. Nee, 243 Md. 249, 220 A. 2d 563 (1966). Summary judgment was entered in favor of five more defendants on April 12, 1967. The two actions were consolidated on April 12,1967.

On August 31, 1967, Giant Food filed its third party claim against the parties (including Industrial Park) as to which Parklawn had dismissed and two other parties. Appellant Danac Real Estate Investment Corporation (Danac) filed its third party claim against the same parties on September 6,1967.

[104]*104Ultimately amended third party claims were filed by Giant Food and Danac against these same parties. The third party claim of Danac recited the filing of the actions by Parklawn against each of the third party plaintiffs, denied the allegations that Parklawn made against the third party plaintiffs in its declaration and stated that if Parklawn is found entitled to recover against Danac on the basis of the allegations contained in the declaration and if the allegations were supported by competent evidence any liability which might be imposed as to the third party plaintiff would “have been caused in part by similar actions, negligence, carelessness and breach of duty by the * * * Third Party Defendants, who would therefore, be entitled to contribute to any damages arising out of such liability, in that [the] Third Party Defendants own property draining into the property owned by Parklawn, Inc., and * * * the said Third Party Defendants, have graded, paved, changed or otherwise removed natural ground cover from their respective property contiguous to and in the area of the property owned by Parklawn, Inc., so as to copiously increase the run-off of water” etc., claiming that third party defendants had “thus directly contributed to any damage which may have been done * * * as alleged in the original Declaration” and praying judgment against the third party defendants for the contributable portion of any sums which Park-lawn might be found entitled to recover in this action.

Giant Food’s third party claim was similar in content and alleged that the third party defendants had “jointly graded, paved, changed and otherwise removed natural ground cover from their respective properties”, etc. “so as to increase copiously the run-off of water” etc. (emphasis added)

In sustaining demurrers to the amended third party claims the circuit court judge said in pertinent part:

“The amended third-party claims share a similar fault in wording, this time alleging that the joint acts of the third-party defendants caused [105]*105all of plaintiff’s damage. This, again, falls short of the necessary allegation that there exists a concert of action between Giant, Danac and the third-party defendants together which would make them all joint tortfeasors, and for this reason it is obvious that the demurrers should be sustained again.
“The principal issue which must be decided is whether the demurrers should be sustained with or without leave to amend.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 A.2d 867, 254 Md. 100, 1969 Md. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giant-food-inc-v-washington-rockville-industrial-park-inc-md-1969.