Gross v. Davenport

4 Balt. C. Rep. 392
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedMay 19, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 392 (Gross v. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Davenport, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 392 (Md. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

STANTON, J.

The bill of complaint in this case prays for a mandatory injunction directing the defendant, Davenport, to remove the concrete wall and the dirt filling on the lot of Davenport between the concrete wall and Ayrdale avenue, or so much thereof as may be necessary to allow the surface water to Bow in its natural course over the lot of Davenport.

The plaintiff and the defendant are adjoining lot owners. The property of each is on the south side of Barring-ton road. The lot of Mr. Gross 'beginning on the south side of Barrington road at a distance of sixty feet westerly from the corner of Ayrdale avenue, and running thence on the south side of Barrington road sixty feet; thence south, parallel with Ayrdale avenue with an even depth of one hundred and sixty-eight feet. The lot of Mr. Davenport begins at the corner formed by the intersection of the south side of Barrington road and the west side of Ayrdale avenue and runs west, binding on the south side of Barrington road, sixty feet; thence south, parallel with Ayrdale avenue with even depth of one hundred and sixty-eight feet. Each of said lots is improved by a frame bungalow in which the respective parties reside.

The evidence discloses that from a point on the south side of Barrington road, three hundred feet west of the comer of Ayrdale avenue and Barring-ton road, there is a fall in the grade towards Ayrdale avenue of about eight feet. The plaintiff claims that the natual fall of the land, and, of necessity the flow of surface water, is from the west towards the east or northeast, as a result of which the surface water on the rear of the lots as far west as No. 3809 Barrington road flows, and should be permitted to flow as a matter of right, over the rear of the lot at the corner of Ayrdale avenue and Barrington road, which is the Davenport property.

The evidence discloses further that ever since this property has been improved, (certainly since it has been owned and occupied by the defendant), the flow of the water lias been over the [393]*393rear of his lot, and the effect has been to cut gulleys in the surface, and to wash away his top soil, and the subsoil at different points, so that the surface soil of his lot would be carried to the east, and cover the concrete sidewalk which runs along the east side of his property on Ayrdale avenue.

This condition in the winter time, resulting from the flow of surface water over the rear of the Davenport lot, coupled with the overflow from the unpaved street bed and gutter in Ayrdale avenue causes a solid mass of ice, covering practically the entire rear portion of his lot, as well as the greater portion of the sidewalk, between the easternmost line of his lot and the curb.

To correct this condition, Messrs Davenport and Gross had a conference. Mr. Davenport fixes the time as being in the spring of 1922, while Mr. Gross fixes the time as about November, 1922. But the defendant, Davenport, says that Mr. Gross manifested little or no interest in the existing conditions, and after further inconvenience on the part of Mr. Davenport he concluded to remedy the condition. He had erected in May of 1923, a concrete wall, beginning at the southwest corner of his lot, and running north on the dividing line, to a point about opposite the south wall of his bungalow. Then, subsequently, he had dug a blind ditch from the northernmost end of his concrete wall, and continuing" to the front line of his property, so as to carry off the water which might back up against the wall, or flow over his front lawn; and thereby avoid any damage either to Mr. Gross or himself from the accumulation of water alongside of the concrete wall.

The plaintiff complains that, as a result of the erection of this wall, water has accumulated on his lot to a depth almost equal to the height of the wall. And on two occasions, at least, has so far covered the area of the back of his lot, as to run into the cellar of his home. This condition is said to have occurred in the late winter of 1923-1924, during which time we had heavy snowfalls, as well as considerable rain-. fall. Since the blind ditch has been dug by the defendant there has not been a repetition of the flooded cellar. But the complaint of the plaintiff is that even now, in times of heavy rainfall, there is an accumulation of water along the concrete wall on the Gross lot, which extends to the west of his lor, and has caused the surface to be soft and muddy; and makes it almost impossible to use portions of the rear lawn for hanging out laundry, and has destroyed the sod and has made the soil so wet that no grass seed will germinate. Now, it is this condition that has brought about the controversy in this ease.

The two cases which have been relied on in the argument as coming from the Court of Appeals of this State are the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company vs. Davis, 68th Maryland, page 281, and City Dairy Company vs. Sallie H. Scott, 129th Maryland, page 548.

An examination of the records of these cases discloses that neither one of them has in them the facts found in the present case. The case of P., W. & B. Railroad Company vs. Davis is relied upon by the plaintiff as a ground for relief. But this case was an action at law against a railroad company for obstructing an open gutter or water channel which carried surface water from higher ground along the south side of the Davis house. The ease of the City Dairy vs. Scott was also an action at law for damage to property by causing water to flow or back up on the land of an adjoining owner, as a result of an effort to get rid of water which had accumulated in a pool or pond, and the filling of the pond had changed the surface of the soil.

It appears to this Court that the precise question to be decided in this case has never been considered by the Court of Appeals of this State. And the decisions in other jurisdictions are very conflicting. The confusion results from the application of what is said to be the rule of the civil law, and the rule of the common law, as applied to cases of this character. Some States apply one rule and some the other. In the case in 68 Md., the Court applied what is called the rule of the civil law, and that has occasioned the State of Maryland to be classified as one of those adopting that rule. But after all, each case is controlled by its peculiar facts and railroad cases are treated as a special class. Some text writters say there is no such thing as separate rules, but that what is called the rule of the civil law comprehends the principle announced as the common law rule, and that the distinctions are made in applying the rule to urban property. 20 L. R. A. (N. S.), page [394]*394155 note. The rule of the civil law is, generally speaking, that the owner of the lower land holds it with a servitude for the natural flow of surface water as a right in the owners of the upper land; while the common law rule holds that surface water is a common enemy, which can be fought as best it may. Then again some jurisdictions have held that even in urban property the obstruction of the flow of the surface water cannot be interrupted without drainage in such a manner as will avoid loss or damage to the adjoining lot owner. L. R. A. 1917 F 942.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-davenport-mdcirctctbalt-1925.