Gilmore v. Driscoll

122 Mass. 199, 1877 Mass. LEXIS 99
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 122 Mass. 199 (Gilmore v. Driscoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199, 1877 Mass. LEXIS 99 (Mass. 1877).

Opinion

Gray, C. J.

The right of an owner of land to the support of the land adjoining is jure naturae, like the right in a flowing stream. Every owner of land is entitled, as against his neighbor, to have the earth stand and the water flow in its natural condition. In the case of running water, the owner of each estate by which it flows has only the right to the use of the water for reasonable purposes, qualified by a like right in every other owner of land above or below him on'the same stream. But in the case of land, which is fixed in its place, each owner has the absolute right to have his land remain in its natural condition, unaffected by any act of his neighbor; and, if the neighbor digs upon or improves his own land so as to injure this right, may maintain an action against him, without proof of negligence.

But this right of property is only in the land in its natural condition, and the damages in such an action are limited to the injury to the land itself, and do not include any injury to buildings or improvements thereon. While each owner may build upon and improve his own estate at his pleasure, provided he does not infringe upon the natural right of his neighbor, no one can by his own act enlarge the liability of his neighbor for an interference with this natural right. If a man is not content to enjoy his land in its natural condition, but wishes to build upon or improve it, he must either make an agreement with his neighbor, or dig his foundations so deep, or take such other precautions, as to insure the stability of his buildings or improvements, whatever excavations the neighbor may afterwards make upon his own land in the exercise of his right.

In 2 Rol. Ab. 564, it is stated that in Wilde v. Minsterley, in 15 Car. I., it was decided in the King’s Bench, after a verdict for the plaintiff, that “ if A. be seised in fee of copyhold land next adjoining to the land of B., and A. erects a new house upon his 'opyhold land, and some part of the house is erected upon the confines of his land next adjoining to the land of B., and B. after-wards digs his land so near to the foundation of A.’s house, but no part of A.’s land, that thereby the foundation of the house and the house itself fall into the pit, yet no action lies by A. against B., because it was A.’s own fault that he built his house so near the land of B., for he by his act cannot hinder B. from making the best use of his own land that he can. But it seems [202]*202that a man who has land next adjoining to my land cannot dig his land so near my land that thereby my land shall go into his pit; and therefore, if the action had been brought for this, it would lie.”

In the same court, in 15 Car. II., Justices Twisden and Wind-ham said that it had been adjudged that, “ if I, being seised of land, lease forty foot thereof to A. to build a house thereon, and other forty foot to B. to build a house, and one of them builds a house, and then the other digs a cellar in his land, whereby the wall of the first house adjoining falls, no action lies for that, because each one may make the best advantage of his digging; ” “ but it seemed to them that the law is otherwise, if it was an ancient wall or house that falls by such digging.” Palmer v. Fleshees, 1 Sid. 167. In another report, the corresponding statement is, that “ it was adjudged that two having ground adjoining, the one built de nova, and the other in his ground digged so near, that the other fell, and no remedy, the house being new.” Palmer v. Flessier, 1 Keb. 625. That adjudication is referred to in Siderfin as “ 7 Jac. in Pigott and Surie’s case,” and in Keble as “ 7 Car.” But Sury v. Pigot, decided in 1 Car. I., and fully reported in Popham, 166, was upon another point, and is so stated in Keble, ubi supra ; and it would seem that the reference intended may have been to the case of Wilde v. Minsterley, above cited.

There are indeed two or three early cases, in which actions appear to have been sustained for undermining houses by digging on adjoining land. Slingsby v. Barnard, 14 Jac. I., 1 Rol. R. 430. Smith v. Martin, 23 Car. II., 2 Saund. 400. Barwell v. Kensey, 35 Car. II., 3 Lev. 171; S. C. 1 Mod. Entr. 195. But in Slingsby v. Barnard, and in Smith v. Martin, the objections made were not to the right to maintain the action, but only to particulars in the form of the declaration; and in Barwell v. Kensey, the declaration, as construed by the majority of the court, alleged not merely digging near the plaintiff’s foundation, but digging that foundation itself.

In Tenant v. Goldwin, 2 Ld. Raym. 1089, 1094, Lord Holt and Justice Powell are reported to have “ held that a man cannot build so near another man’s house as to throw it down.” But the only point adjudged was the same as in Ball v. Nye, 99 [203]*203Mass. 582, that a man is bound, of common right, to keep a vault upon his own land in repair, so that the filth shall not flow upon his neighbor’s land, “ for he whose dirt it is must keep it that it may not trespass.” S. C. 1 Salk. 360, 361; 6 Mod. 311; 1 Salk. 21; Holt, 500. And upon a comparison of the various reports it is evident that the digging so near another’s wall as to weaken it was not spoken of as giving a right of action to the owner of the wall, but as limiting his liability for the escape of filth caused by the new digging.

The latest and the most authoritative statement of the law of England upon this point before the American Revolution is that of Chief Baron Comyns, who, citing Rolle’s Abridgment and Siderfin’s Reports, ubi supra, says that an action upon the case lies for a nuisance, “ if a man dig a pit in his land, so near that my land falls into the pit; ” but does not lie, “ if a man build an house, and make cellars upon his soil, whereby an house newly built in an adjoining soil falls down.” Com. Dig. Action upon the Case for a Nusance, A., C.

In Thurston v. Hancock, 12 Mass. 220, which was decided in 1815, and is the leading American case on this subject, the plaintiff in 1802 bought a parcel of land upon Beacon Hill in Boston, bounded on the west by land of the town of Boston ; and in 1804 built a brick dwelling-house thereon, with its rear two feet from this boundary, and its foundation fifteen feet below the ancient surface of the land. The defendants in 1811 took a deed of the adjoining land from the town, and began to dig and remove the earth therefrom, and, though notified by the plaintiff that his house was endangered, continued to do so to the depth of forty-five feet, and within six feet of the rear of the plaintiff’s house, and thereby caused part of the earth on the surface of the plaintiff’s land to fall away and slide upon the defendant’s land, and rendered the foundations of the plaintiff’s house insecure, and the occupation thereof dangerous, so that he was obliged to abandon it.

The court, after advisement, and upon a review of the earlier English authorities, held that the plaintiff could recover for the loss of or injury to the soil merely, aud not for the damage to the house; and Chief Justice Parker, in delivering judgment, said: “ It is a common principle of the civil and of the common [204]*204law, that the proprietor of land, unless restrained by covenant or custom, has the entire dominion, not only of the soil, but of the space above and below the surface, to any extent he may choose to occupy it.

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Bluebook (online)
122 Mass. 199, 1877 Mass. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-v-driscoll-mass-1877.