Kelly v. Dunning

43 N.J. Eq. 62
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 43 N.J. Eq. 62 (Kelly v. Dunning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Dunning, 43 N.J. Eq. 62 (N.J. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The complainant claims a right of drainage through the land of the defendant, and this suit is brought to vindicate the validity of his claim. The right claimed, if it exists at all, is appurtenant to a tract of land which the complainant purchased of James M. Trippe in the spring-of 1867. At the time of the complainant’s purchase, Mr. Trippe owned a tract of land in the city of Orange-containing about three acres, bounded on the north by a public way, now called Central avenue, on the east and south by land of Eichard B. Harrison, and on the west by a natural stream known as Parrow brook. The complainant’s purchase consisted of a strip fifty feet in width, lying within about ninety feet of the eastern ■ boundary of the tract just described, and extending from the public way, now called Central avenue, to the land of Eichard B. Harrison on the south. The great bulk of the land still held by Mr. Trippe, after the complainant’s purchase, lay to the west of the strip purchased by complainant. Title to the land purchased by complainant was made to Charles "Wiley on the 5th of March, 1867. Mr. Wiley advanced the purchase-money for the complainant, and took title to the land simply as security. The land in equity belonged to the complainant, and the legal title to it was conveyed to him on the 30th of May, 1874. The complainant erected a dwelling-house on the land in the early part of 1868, and took possession of it, with his family, in July of the same year, and has since resided there continuously.

The complainant, by his bill, alleges that for many years prior to his purchase, there had existed, as a means of drainage, an open ditch on the Trippe tract, running through its centre, and extending from its eastern boundary to Parrow brook; that it was there, serving as a drain, at the time of his purchase, and then constituted the only means of drainage which the land he purchased possessed, and was one of the principal reasons which induced him to purchase. He also says, that the ditch has, since his purchase, been continuously used as a means of drainage for his and the adjacent lands up until September, 1884, when the defendant wrongfully closed it at the point where it intersects [64]*64her land, and thereby caused his land to become flooded and greatly injured. The defendant acquired title in June, 1884, to that part of the Trippe tract lying next to Parrow brook. Her purchase embraced all the land of that tract lying next to Par-row brook and extending along Central avenue one hundred and seventy-seven and a half feet, and thence back to the land of Richard B. Harrison on the south.

The defendant does not deny that she obstructed and closed a ditch extending from the complainant’s land to hers, but she does deny that, at the time of the complainant’s purchase, a ditch existed on the Trippe tract, as an apparent and continuous means of drainage, but says, that the ditch which she closed was a subterranean drain, which the complainant and others constructed subsequent to his purchase. Her averment respecting the origin of the drain which she closed is this : She says, that the complainant and other persons who purchased parts of the Trippe tract, lying between the complainant’s land and her land, so changed the natural surface of their lands, by filling and grading, after the complainant’s purchase, as to cause the water which, prior .to such change, flowed off evenly over the surface, to collect and stand on their lands, and that they then, in order to relieve their lands from the water thus collected, conducted the water to her' land, and there discharged it in bulk at one point. And this, she says, is the drain which she closed.

The evidence leaves no doubt respecting what the truth is, as to whether or not a ditch of the kind described existed on the Trippe tract prior to, and at the time of the complainant’s purchase. The fact that there was a ditch there, at that time, and that it had existed there for a long time anterior to that date, is established, I think, beyond doubt. The natural formation of the land was such, as to render it almost certain that the water would make a channel for itself, at the point, where it is claimed the ditch existed. That was the lowest point in the Trippe tract, and the declivity of the adjacent lands on the north, east and south was in that direction. The natural condition of the land, adjacent to the ditch, was such as to render a ditch or drain, of some kind, indispensable to the reclamation of the land. [65]*65Some of the witnesses for the defence describe the land, forming the central part of the Trippe tract, as wet and marshy, and several of the complainant’s witnesses say, that without a ditch that part of the tract would have been a pond. The water-shed to the east was sufficient in extent to render it certain, that in times of heavy rain and the melting of large bodies of snow, a large volume of water descended from that direction over the Trippe tract to Parrow brook. So that, from the natural configuration of the country, as well as from the original condition of the land itself, it would seem to be extremely probable, that there must have been, at a date prior to the complainant’s purchase, a water-way of some kind through the Trippe tract, at or near the place where, it is alleged, this ditch existed.

The proof furnished, by the recollection of witnesses, of the existence of the ditch prior to, and at the time of the complainant’s purchase, is of the most ample and convincing character. Richard B. Harrison, now over eighty years of age, and who has owned land adjacent' to the Trippe tract, on the east and south, since 1828, swears, that a run has existed through the middle of the Trippe tract ever since he can remember anything, and that he is positive that it was there while Edward Pierson owned that tract, and also while Barnabas Day owned it. This tract was conveyed by Pierson to Day in 1841, and by Day to Trippe in 1854. ’With regard to the origin of this run Mr. Plarrison says, nature formed it first, but somebody cleaned it out afterwards. Fifteen other witnesses, who have been intimately acquainted with the Trippe tract for periods, extending from twenty to thirty years last past, swear positively to the existence of the ditch prior to the date of the complainant’s purchase. They describe it as an open ditch, carrying water most of each year, seldom dry, three or four feet in width, about two feet deep, extending from the eastern boundary of the Trippe tract, through its centre, to Parrow brook. They also say, that when they first knew it, its appearance indicated that it had been in existence for many years; bushes, such as alders, briers, and other brushwood, were growing on its bank, showing a growth of several years, and also rendering the line of the ditch [66]*66plainly discernible almost all the way through the Trippe tract. Eight of them have resided on parts of the Trippe tract for periods, extending from nine months to near twenty years, and consequently have been in position to know, from daily observation, whether there was a ditch there or not. Two of them testify that they cleaned the ditch out, one in 1869 and the other in 1870. One, who purchased a part of the Trippe tract in 1867, says, that for two years after he erected his dwelling, he had neither well nor cistern, and that in the interval, the water he used for washing was very often obtained from the ditch. One of the fifteen swears, that he remembers that the ditch was in existence over twenty years ago, for about twenty years ago he, with other boys, caught fish in it by an unusual method.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.J. Eq. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-dunning-njch-1887.