McCauley v. Phillips

219 S.E.2d 854, 216 Va. 450, 1975 Va. LEXIS 313
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 1, 1975
DocketRecord 740840
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 219 S.E.2d 854 (McCauley v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCauley v. Phillips, 219 S.E.2d 854, 216 Va. 450, 1975 Va. LEXIS 313 (Va. 1975).

Opinion

Cochran, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*451 In January, 1972, Patrick O. McCauley and Thyrza Brooking Mc-Cauley, his wife, filed their bill of complaint in the trial court seeking to enjoin Forrest A. Phillips and Raymond Phillips from channeling surface water through a discharge pipe onto the McCauleys’ land and to recover $2,500 for damages alleged to have been suffered. After a hearing on April 18, 1972, the chancellor, by final decree entered on May 8, 1974, denied the injunction on the ground that there was no evidence of substantial damage to the McCauley property. In this appeal the McCauleys contend that the chancellor erred in not awarding them injunctive relief and damages.

The evidence shows that the McCauley lot, containing approximately one and one-half acres, was located north of Charlottesville in Albemarle County, generally to the west and southwest of the Phillips property. In the area of the drainage problem the two tracts were separated by land owned by East Coast Oil Corporation. The Phillips land and nearby properties naturally sloped toward the McCauley property.

The McCauleys acquired their land in 1958 and built thereon their home, in which they lived with their two children. The Phillipses, who purchased one tract in 1964, thereafter acquired additional contiguous land. They erected buildings and graded and hard-surfaced a portion of their property to facilitate the operation and expansion of their building supply business.

McCauley testified that there was never any “mass amount” of water moving across his land from the uphill lands until 1968, when the Phillipses installed a drainage pipe eight inches in diameter on the southwest portion of their property. Since that time, however, whenever the area experienced rainfall of normal intensity, water from the Phillips land flowed across the East Coast parcel and flooded a part of the McCauley tract. McCauley testified that the water, varying from six to twenty feet in width and three to eight inches in depth, had killed the McCauleys’ grass in spots, washed out two rows of their garden and a culvert under a creek, destroyed an apple tree, and eroded dirt under a gate. The ground in the path of the stream had become so soggy that his children could no longer play there. Moreover, the water flowed over the end of his septic field, requiring him to have the septic tank pumped for the first time. McCauley further testified that because of his efforts in reseeding grass and replacing fill dirt there was little evidence of damage to his land.

McCauley’s wife and brother-in-law substantially corroborated his testimony. Moreover, photographs introduced into evidence *452 showed water flowing across or standing on the McCauley lot after rainfalls.

The Phillipses, in their testimony, maintained that the surface water had always flowed toward the southern portion of their property and across the intervening tract to the McCauley land. They admitted that in 1968 they installed a drainage system to channel water around the buildings erected on the northern portion of their property, and that they installed a pipe to drain approximately 19,000 square feet of their total area of 121,000 square feet. Only two building gutters emptied into the pipe. The mouth of the drainpipe was located within a few feet of what had been the lowest part of their property before they graded it. To diffuse the water and slow it down they placed railroad ties, planks and rocks at the mouth of the pipe on their property, with the result that no trace of erosion could be seen in that area. They further testified that other surface water, which did not run through the drainpipe, flowed onto the McCauley lot from the Phillips land and from other nearby properties. The unpaved portion of the Phillips lot continued to absorb surface water.

J. Whitt, a real estate broker and mechanical engineer, testified that it would be impossible for the 8-inch pipe to discharge enough water to create a stream fifteen feet wide and six inches deep; that if the McCauleys’ septic tank had been properly installed it would not have been damaged by the flow of water from the Phillips land; and that he usually pumped out septic tanks every five or six years. Amon Williams, a building contractor, testified that few septic tanks in Albemarle County were used for ten years without being pumped.

Whitt, Williams, and other witnesses for the Phillipses testified that they could see no evidence of damage to the McCauley lot from surface water. The Phillipses also introduced into evidence numerous photographs of the drainage area that tended to support their position that the McCauley lot was not damaged by the water.

After hearing the evidence ore tenus and viewing the McCauley, Phillips and nearby properties, the chancellor made certain preliminary-findings of fact. He noted that the area was undergoing a transition from rural use to business and commercial development, and that, through zoning, economic activity such as that engaged in by the Phillipses was being encouraged while residential use was being “phased out”. He found that the McCauleys suffered extensive flooding after heavy rains but “there is not substantial evidence of any destructive force here. The Court [finds] that a considerable *453 inconvenience and temporary damage is inflicted by that flooding. . . . The only evidence of any destructiveness is that of the removal of the soil . . . but the major impact on the McCauley property is that of the saturation of the soil itself . . . from the surface water flowing”. He also found that the Phillipses had not used their land negligently or carelessly, and that they had not maliciously discharged water on the McCauley lot. He expressed the belief that “McCauley’s damages would be just as great if the court [enjoined use of the pipe] because the surface water would . . . eventually wind up in the same area. The thing that seem to me to be the basis of the problem is the changing of the surface of the Phillips property so that the water is not absorbe [d], it’s got to go somewhere and will eventually wind up on Mr. McCauley”.

In the final decree the chancellor included additional findings of fact. The decree stated that he found no silting or erosion at the mouth of the drainpipe or elsewhere, except for a “little erosion” where the water flowed under a gate on the McCauley property, at least 500 feet from the Phillips land; that the Phillipses had graded their land, erected buildings and blacktopped the surface, thereby increasing the flow of surface water after rains; that the Phillipses had done nothing to increase the area naturally drained; that they had placed “large rocks and pieces of concrete” at the end of the pipe “to diffuse and disperse the water”; that the water flowed across the McCauley land in “no defined bed”; and that there was no evidence of substantial damages to the McCauleys. Finding evidence of “potential damage”, however, the chancellor decreed that if the Mc-Cauleys, or their successors in title, should construct an underground conduit to carry off the water, they would have an easement to connect with the Phillips discharge pipe, and the cost of installing and maintaining the conduit should be borne equally by the owners of the McCauley and Phillips lands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 S.E.2d 854, 216 Va. 450, 1975 Va. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccauley-v-phillips-va-1975.