Hansel v. Collins

23 A.2d 686, 180 Md. 209, 1942 Md. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 13, 1942
Docket[No. 70, October Term, 1941.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 686 (Hansel v. Collins) 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
Hansel v. Collins, 23 A.2d 686, 180 Md. 209, 1942 Md. LEXIS 131 (Md. 1942).

Opinion

Marbury, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed by the appellants in the Circuit Court for Allegany County on October 2, 1940, to enjoin the appellees from interfering with the use of a water pipe line by the appellants. To this bill an answer was filed, and also a cross-bill, in which the appellees asked that the appellants be enjoined from using the water, and a mandatory injunction be issued against them to cease such use and to sever the connections they had made with the water line. The appellants answered the cross-bill, testimony was taken, and the court below signed a decree dismissing the bill of complaint, and enjoining the appellants from using the water, and requiring them to remove any connections they had with the water line. From this decree the appeal herein was taken.

The testimony shows that in May, 1884, the property of the appellants and the property of the appellees at Rawlings, Allegany County, were both owned by a certain Lynn Hutson. On May 14, 1884, Lynn Hutson and his wife, Mary M. Hutson, conveyed to Mary Shaw the property which is now owned by the appellees. This deed was recorded on May 21, 1884. Five days after the date of this deed, and on the nineteenth day of May, 1884, Lynn Hutson conveyed to his wife, Mary M. Hutson, the property now owned by the appellants. In the first deed, in which the grantee of the second deed joined as grantor with her husband, there is no mention of any reservation of any rights in the property granted, it being an out and out conveyance in fee simple. The Shaw property, which is that of the ap *212 pellees, was subsequently placed by Mary Shaw in the name of herself and her husband, Alexander Shaw, as tenants by the entireties. At her death it passed to Alexander Shaw, who died owning it. His will was probated on July 28, 1905. He devised the property to Mary S. Rawlings and Norma Rawlings for their lives, and to the survivor for her life. Remainders were left for one-half interest in the farm each to the children or descendants of each of the life tenants, living at the death of the survivor, with provisions that the children and descendants of one should take all in case there were no children or descendants of the other. Both of the life tenants married, Mary Rawlings becoming Mary Lanham and Norma Rawlings becoming Norma Wentz. Norma Wentz and her husband filed an equity suit against Mary Lanham and her husband and all the remaindermen for the sale of the property, and trustees were appointed. 'These trustees sold the property to the appellees, and conveyed it to them on March 12, 1940. The testimony shows that both of the life tenants left the property when they were married in- 1906, but Mrs. Wentz returned there in 1930 and lived there until 1940, when the property was sold to the appellees. Both of the life tenants were living there in 1905 with their parents.

During the lifetime of Alexander Shaw, he constructed a two-inch water line from a point near the foot of a mountain on his property at Mill Run. This water line came down over his property to bring water to his mansion house, and in so doing it ran across a córner of the property of the appellants. In 1905 Mrs. Wentz was asked by Mrs. Hutson, the owner of the appellants’ property at that time, if she could tap this two-inch line by a one-inch pipe line in order to provide water for the Hutson house on the property now owned by the appellants. Permission was given by Mrs. Wentz to Mrs. Hutson to do this verbally, and Mrs. Wentz, who testified in the case, stated that she *213 told Mrs. Hutson that she could have it as long as she lived. Mrs. Hutson died in 1912, and her property was sold through equity proceedings in 1920. A deed was made by the trustees appointed in such proceedings conveying this property to the appellants on June 9, 1921. The appellants’ property touches Mill Run, which in some places appears to go through it, so that it is not cut off from water. The appellant, Charles S. Hansel, testified that when he bought the place the water from the one-inch pipe line was used in the house and the watering trough; that he built six houses, the first one about ten or fifteen years ago, and got water for these houses from this line, abandoning the connection with the watering trough, but also putting in a connection into his milk house. That aside from his own dwelling house and dairy house, there are nine or ten families in his houses being supplied with the water. The appellee, William C. Collins, testified that after he bought the property he told Mr. Hansel he would either have to disconnect his water or pay water rent, and that the appellant “allowed he could pay water rent,” and bills were sent him, but never paid. This conversation took place during April, 1940, when Mr. Collins got his deed.

There is further testimony that the use of all this water by the appellants interferes with the' flow to the appellees’ dwelling house, although this is denied. There is also testimony produced by the appellants that the Hutson one-inch line was put there about forty-five years ago, but this is by a witness who has no way to fix it except his recollection. It is directly contrary to the testimony of Mrs. Wentz, who gave the permission to connect it in 1905, and to the testimony of the daughter of Mrs. Hutson, who said that the one-inch line was laid in 1905, and during the entire lifetime of her mother, water from it was only used in the house and in the watering trough. She also testified that the two-inch water line was laid from the mountain in 1895 *214 or 1896 by Alexander Shaw, who had married Mr. Hutson’s sister. A witness, William Leese, who was seventy-five years old the day he testified, said that he did the actual work of laying the pipe line for Major Shaw, who paid for it. That at the time it was built, there was no connection made for the Hutson place, but simply a two-inch water line from the mountain side through Mill Run to the Shaw mansion. The witness was unable to give even an approximate year as to when this was done. Another witness, Clara Hardy, who was sixty-one year old, remembered seeing Mr. Leese there digging, but she could not tell when it was, but supposed it was forty-seven years ago.

The immediate cause of the filing of the bill of complaint was the fact that the appellees had started laying a pipe line around the appellants’ property, so as to have the two-inch water line entirely on the appellees’ land. The appellants claim that the fact that this line, as now constructed, runs over a small part of their land makes them owners of it in common. The testimony, however, seems to show that at the time the line was built, the appellant’s property was owned by Mrs. Hutson, and the appellees’ property was owned by Major Shaw, and the line as then constructed was not used in any way to provide water for the appellants’ property. It is not shown that Mrs. Hutson contributed in any way to the cost of laying the two-inch line. Neither is it shown that there was any permission, agreement or arrangement of any kind made, by which it was to go across the corner of her land. It was probably put there by mistake, but whether that is true or not, there is no evidence that the appellants or their predecessors in title were ever co-owners of the main line. At the time there was a unity of title in the two pieces of property there was no water line on it, although Mill Run was in some places the boundary line.

When Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 686, 180 Md. 209, 1942 Md. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansel-v-collins-md-1942.