Mayor, Etc., of Easton v. Turner

83 A. 42, 117 Md. 111, 1912 Md. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 A. 42 (Mayor, Etc., of Easton v. Turner) 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
Mayor, Etc., of Easton v. Turner, 83 A. 42, 117 Md. 111, 1912 Md. LEXIS 87 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Boyd, 0. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellees and Samuel Norris against the appellant, but subsequently it was, with leave of the Court, dismissed as to Mr. Norris, without prejudice to the other plaintiffs. It prayed for an injunction to prohibit the appellant from the construction of drains and curbing on Goldsborough street between Harrison and Hanson streets, in Easton, in the manner proposed as set out in the bill, and from draining the water of Dover, Harrison and Washington streets over and upon that part of Goldsborough street and from cutting down or in any manner injuring the shade and ornamental trees on it. A preliminary injunction was granted, and after filing its answer the defendant made a motion to dissolve it. On April 11, 1911, a decree was *113 passed making the injunction perpetual and the Mayor and council wer-e ‘‘perpetually enjoined from draining the water on Dover-, Washington and Harrison streets into Goldsborough street as originally proposed by ordinance No. 198, and from so lowering the curb and gutters on Goldsborough street as to destroy or to injure in any manner the trees on said street between Harrison and Hanson streets in said town of Easton.” This appeal was taken from that decree.

The bill and answer, when taken in connection with subsequent events, must to a great extent dispose of this appeal, notwithstanding a large amount of testimony was taken. The theory of the bill was that the defendant (appellant) was about to divert large quantities of surface water from its natural and usual course, direct its flow along certain streets until it reached the corner of Harrison and Goldsborough streets and then conduct it in an open drain on Goldsborough street to Turner’s alley, thence in a stream flowing across the property of the complainants Turner and Jump. It is alleged that in order to conduct the greatly increased volume of water down Goldsborough street, between Harrison and Hanson streets, it would, according to the plans of the town, be necessary to deepen the drains from twelve to sixteen inches, and in order to secure a proper foundation for the drains it would be necessary to dig down eighteen inches below the bottom of them — thus making cuts in the sides of Goldsborough street to the depth of thirty-four inches — and that the cutting of the drains would necessarily he very injurious to, if not entirely destructive of the trees on the sidewalks.

While the answer does not admit that the defendant proposed to drain the water precisely as the plaintiffs alleged, it does in effect admit a diversion of it from its accustomed flow, its concentration and increased volume and emptying it into the drain running through the Turner and Jump properties. It says that “in order to secure a proper drainage of the water along said Goldsborough street it is necessary to change and deepen the drains upon each side of *114 said street, but (they) neither admit nor deny the depth alleged to be necessary” in the bill. They neither admit nor deny the injuries which the hill alleges the trees will sustain, by reason of the drains being made so deep, in order to carry off the large quantity of 'water.

The bill was filed on August 12th, 1909, and the 0answer on September 1st of that year. What is spoken of as resolution or ordinance 198, which had been passed by the Mayor and Council, seems to have given rise to the trouble. On ■ December 21, 1910, an agreement of solicitors was filed by which it was agreed that the defendant had put in a storm-sewer for the accommodation of the water which was originally intended by resolution 198 to pass down Goldsborough ■ street and down the culvert between Fountain’s and Turner’s properties into the stream. The present Mayor testified that 'he did not know what that resolution was until about the timo •the testimony was being taken in this case, and as he did not believe that was the scheme proposed by the engineers, who had made the plans several years before, an'd as he was opposed to carrying out that resolution, he recommended its repeal which was duly done.

The storm sewer in the opinion of the lower Court relieved the difficulty at present as to the diversion of the water, and it said that if it proved inadequate and resulted in flooding the plaintiffs’ properties, they could then apply for an injunction under the principles announced in Guest v. Church Hill, 90 Md. 689. There would seeem to be but little room for doubt that the plan as proposed when the bill was filed might have resulted disastrously to the plaintiffs, and the appellant practically admits by its action that it was not a proper plan. Under the circumstances there can be no ground for complaint of the part of the decree that enjoined the defendant from draining the water as proposed by ordinance No. 198 and that is not now urged. It is strenuously contended, however, 1st, that the Court has no power to interfere with the exercise of the sound judgment and discretion of the municipal authorities as to the grading, draining and pav *115 ing of the streets, inasmuch as it is empowered by the Legislature to act, and 2nd, that if the Court is ordinarily possessed of such right it should not have interfered in this case.

As the case is presented by the pleadings, the only reason for digging the drains or gutters on Gfoldsborough street so deep was to carry off the large quantity of water which the appellant proposed to divert from its regular course and to turn into that street. The bill so alleges and the answer in effect admits it. Inasmuch then as that plan has been abandoned, and it is practically admitted to have been an improper one, in so far as the disposition of the water is concerned, it would seem to be clear that when this case came before the Court on the motion to dissolve, there was nothing which it could properly do but continue the injunction. It is said in Miller’s Eq. Proc. 708: “When the motion to dissolve is heard upon bill, answer and testimony and the bill shows a case entitling the plaintiff to an injunction, the injunction will not be dissolved if the equity of the bill is not denied by the answer. The defendant can not rely upon the testimony for the purpose of denying or disproving the equity stated in the bill, where the answer is not a sufficient denial of the equity” — citing Hamilton v. Whitridge, 11 Md. 128; Bouldin v. Mayor, etc., of Baltimore, 15 Md. 18.

At the time the bill and answer were filed, according to the allegations of the bill and the practical admissions of the answer, it was proposed to make the gutters so deep’that the trees would be injured or destroyed in order to carry out the plan of diverting and concentrating the water, which was confessedly an improper plan and has been abandoned. There is no other reason given in the answer for making the gutters so deep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A. 42, 117 Md. 111, 1912 Md. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-etc-of-easton-v-turner-md-1912.