McLeod v. . Wrightsville Beach

50 S.E.2d 729, 229 N.C. 621, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1948
StatusPublished

This text of 50 S.E.2d 729 (McLeod v. . Wrightsville Beach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLeod v. . Wrightsville Beach, 50 S.E.2d 729, 229 N.C. 621, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 377 (N.C. 1948).

Opinion

The plaintiffs brought this action for injunction permanently restraining the defendant from proceeding further in the construction of a pumping station intended to be connected with the city water system, and a mandatory decree requiring the removal of the uncompleted structure. *Page 622

The plaintiff complains that the structure it is intended to complete constitutes a nuisance in that it is located in the public street adjacent to plaintiffs' dwelling, which is nearing completion, and interferes with ingress and egress to and from the premises; and will, if completed, obstruct the plaintiffs' view from that side of the house, important because of the character of the surroundings and the use to which the property is put as a pleasure resort; and that if put into operation the noise of the continual pumping will interfere with the comfort and welfare of plaintiffs in the enjoyment of their property. All this the defendant denies.

The plaintiffs, at the time of institution of the action, obtained a temporary restraining order and order to show cause, returnable before Judge Burney, who heard the matter at Chambers in Wilmington, July 15, 1948.

The decision of the appeal deals principally with the question of obstructing the public streets of the city, and incidental relief demanded by the plaintiffs regarding the alleged nuisance, and it is not thought necessary, nor is it practicable, to set out in detail many of the assignments of error brought forward, such as objections to the admission of evidence, which have, nevertheless, been duly considered. Evidence pertinent to the inquiry is summarized:

At the hearing the pleadings on both sides were introduced as affidavits in the cause and numerous other affidavits were presented together with explanatory maps and photographs.

It may be inferred from the evidence that plaintiffs own the property on which they are now building, by mesne conveyances of successive holders from 1910. They purchased in 1946. The lot so purchased appears upon the map of Wrightsville Beach Extension duly recorded in New Hanover County, showing its location as bounded on the East by Lumina Avenue and on the South by Raleigh Street. On the south it runs with Raleigh Street approximately 100 feet toward Banks Channel, otherwise known as The Sound. In that place Banks Channel, looking to the north, veers eastward, making an angular area beyond the west boundary of the property, including what is designated on the map as the "bluff," or bank, running down into a declivity increasing in degree to the water line. There has been built around plaintiffs' property, on the property line, a retaining wall of cinder blocks, along the Raleigh Street side and partially on Lumina Avenue and along the sound side. The physical situation at the situs of the controversy as shown by the maps and description of witnesses is as follows:

The area known as Raleigh Street between Lumina Avenue and the sound is unpaved. Near the western line of plaintiffs' property and at the point where the bank begins to incline toward the water of the sound, the city, about 12 years ago put up a barrier of posts 12" in diameter and *Page 623 30" above the ground, closing off the bank leading to the sound as a dangerous area, and to prevent the use of that portion of the area by the public as a passageway or street. This portion of the area known as Raleigh Street is described as a "dead end" and incapable of use as a street because of the steep declivity of the bank, the contour and topography of the ground; and the evidence of defendant tends to show that it had never been used as such and could not be so used.

The structure of which the plaintiffs complain is beyond this barrier toward the sound; and the contour map sent up with the record shows a substantial incline in the bank, beginning before the structure is reached and continuing with greater declivity beyond it. The structure as far as completed shows a concrete slab over the well approximately 6' square, about half way between the north and south boundaries of Raleigh Street projected westerly, but somewhat nearer the northern boundary. Between the structure and north side there is 19.23' and between the structure and the south side it is 24.85' which with the 5.92' width of the slab, makes up the 50'. It is a base for the pump house which is intended to be about 7' high, including the cap put on to prevent noises. From this base it is intended to connect by short underground pipe with pipe already installed in the area as a part of the water system. The western boundary of plaintiffs' property is cast of this structure and the concrete slab foundation is some 10' beyond the aforementioned barrier, toward the sound.

For the plaintiffs Mrs. Bullock, in her affidavit, states that she owns a home on Raleigh Street and has known it as it extends from the Atlantic Ocean to the Sound for the last eight years. That about the year 1940 her husband built a pier at the western terminus of Raleigh Street and that the street has been continuously used as a street by the public and property owners adjacent thereto, and owners of the pier. Further, that employees of the city have in the past put gravel and other substances on the surface so that the street from Lumina Avenue westward to the Sound could be used and that it has been used by automobiles and other vehicles as well as pedestrians.

The defendant introduced further evidence tending to show that a condition of extreme emergency existed in the city respecting its water supply, which was wholly inadequate. That the city had employed competent engineers who had made a thorough survey with a view to the location of a well site giving access to water sufficiently free from salt, or salinity. That in this survey they tested water from other borings and found it to be too saline for use; and that the location chosen was the only available site where pure water could be obtained.

Affidavits offered by defendant tended to show that the well was placed approximately 25' from the high water mark of the sound and in an area that had never been used as a public street by the Town of Wrightsville *Page 624 and that the area west of Lumina Avenue comes to a dead end or "dropoff" beyond which it could not be used as a street. The evidence tended to show that all the area sometimes called Raleigh Street west of Lumina Avenue adjoining the property of the plaintiffs which could be used at all is still open to the plaintiffs and has not in any manner been cut off, and that they have adequate access thereto. Evidence with illustrating photographs was offered tending to show that plaintiffs had the area between barrier posts mentioned and Lumina Avenue offering free access to their premises.

Considering this evidence and more to like effect which may be regarded as cumulative on both sides and needs no further detailed notice, Judge Burney found inter alia that the area called Raleigh Street west of Lumina Avenue had never been accepted as a public street by the City of Wrightsville Beach, had not been laid out, graded, prepared or improved by the City nor generally accepted as such by the public.

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Related

Mullen v. Town of Louisburg
33 S.E.2d 484 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1945)
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25 S.E.2d 859 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.E.2d 729, 229 N.C. 621, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-wrightsville-beach-nc-1948.