Haines v. Haines

64 A. 1044, 104 Md. 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 A. 1044 (Haines v. Haines) 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
Haines v. Haines, 64 A. 1044, 104 Md. 208 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, who was plaintiff below, and the appellant’s testator, who was defendant below, owned adjoining farms in Carroll County. For more than thirty y'ears prior to the institution of this suit the entire volume of water from a stream known as “Wolf Pit Branch” had flowed across the farm of the plaintiff, for a distance of 1150 feet, in an artificial aqueduct or race to the farm of the defendant who used the water for domestic, agricultural and manufacturing purposes. The de *210 fendant had during all of that time been accustomed to clean and repair the race when necessary, usually at intervals of two or three years, and to go upon the plaintiff’s farm for that purpose.

In October, 1904, the defendant accompanied by several laborers with' horses and cart, and plow entered the plaintiff’s farm and cleaned and repaired the race. The plaintiff thereafter. by her husband and next friend instituted in the Circuit Court for Carroll County the present suit of trespass quare clausum fregit against the defendant for the entry thus made upon her land and alleged injuries there inflicted by him and his servants upon the soil and grass while working upon the race and for the alleged widening ánd deepening of the race so as to cause large quantities of water to flow over and flood hér land. The case having been moved on affidavit to the Circuit Court for Washington County, and the pleadings conducted to an issue it was tried before a jury and a verdict rendered and judgment entered for the plaintiff for nominal damages. From that judgment this appeal was taken.

■ There was no controversy between the parties to the case as to the relative position of the two farms or the existence and location of the race through which the water flowed across the land of the plaintiff to that of the defendant. The situation was still further simplified by the admission of the plaintiff, during the trial of the case “that the defendant had the right to convey the water of Wolf Pit Branch" to his property by means of the race mentioned in the evidence and shown on the plat, as well as the right to go upon the land of the plaintiff to clean and repair it." The question of fact in the case was whether the defendant and his servants in cleaning and repairing the race within the plaintiff’s enclosure in October, 1904, had exceeded their rights and done greater injury to her land and grass than was reasonably necessary and unavoidable. There is evidence in the record tending to show that no other than usual and necessary cleansing and repairs'had been made on that occasion. There is other evidence tending to show that the defendant had.at that time caused the race to be ma *211 terially deepened and widened and had otherwise unnecessarily injured the plaintiff’s land and grass.

The record contains three bills of exceptions, two relating to rulings of the Court below on the admissibility of evidence and the third being to its action on the prayers. The propriety of the disposition made below of several demurrers is also brought up for review by the appeal.

We will first consider the questions of pleading presented by the record. The declaration in a single count charges the defendant with having, on the 8th of October, 1904, and divers other days, See., forcibly broken and entered the plaintiff’s close and destroyed her grass and soil and widened and deepened the race within the close and caused large quantities of water to flow over and flood the soil to her great damage and injury. It is thus apparent that the declaration charges, as component parts of the outrage complained of, the breaking of the close and the unlawful acts done within it after the entry had been effected. The defendant filed the general issue plea and two special pleas, by way of confession and avoidance, one setting up a prescriptive right in himself to use the race to convey the water from “Wolf Pit Branch” to his farm, and the other setting up the same right to use the race and also a like right to enter the plaintiff’s close and clean and repair the race. The plaintiff joined issue on the general issue plea and demurred to the second and third pleas and the Court sustained the demurrer. The defendant then withdrew those two pleas and filed amended second and third pleas setting up more fully the same defenses as the special pleas originally filed, and further averring in the second plea that in October, 1904, he had cleaned and repaired the race in the ordinary and tisual manner doing no avoidable or unnecessary damage to the plaintiff’s land, and averring in the third plea that he had on that occasion cleaned and repaired the race in the same manner that he had ahvays done it for twenty years theretofore and in an ordinary manner. The plaintiff replied to the amended third plea denying the existence of the alleged prescriptive rights therein set up. The defendant demurred to this repli *212 cation and, his demurrer having been overruled, he joined issue on the replication.

At the trial of the case after the evidence was in the plaintiff with the leave of the Court withdrew her replication to the amended third plea and filed two amended replications of which the first was similar in terms to the former one, but the second averred by way of new assignment that the defendant when he entered upon the plaintiffs lands in October, 1904, dug down the soil and widened the race beyond the condition of its existence for the twenty years prior thereto and despoiled the land and crops of the plaintiff by throwing the debris and offal, accruing from the cutting down of the ditch, upon the lands of the plaintiff beyond the limits he was entitled to do by virtue of any prescriptive right as alleged in the amended third plea. The defendant demurred to this amended replication and his demurrer having been overruled he joined issue on the first amended replication and filed a rejoinder to the second one, traversing its allegations, on which issue was joined.

At the hearing in this.Court the defendant as appellant did not insist on.his objection to the action of the lower Court on any of the demurrers other than those to the second amended plea and the second amended replication. In our opinion no reversible error appears in the rulings upon either of these demurrers. The second amended plea set up a prescriptive right on the part of the defendant to use the race for conveying water to his farm, and averred that he entered the plaintiff’s land in October, 1904, to clean the race and make necessary repairs to it and did no unnecessary or avoidable damage to the land and that the trespasses alleged in the declaration were those acts committed in cleaning and repairing the race. The defendant was not injured by the sustaining of the demurrer to that plea because the amended third plea, to which the demurrer was overruled, set up the same defenses with the' additional one of a secondary prescriptive right in the defendant to clean and repair the race in the manner in which he did it on the occasion complained of in the declaration, and evidence was freely introduced at the trial of the case in support of all of .those defenses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 1044, 104 Md. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-haines-md-1906.