Stanchfield v. City of Newton

7 N.E. 703, 142 Mass. 110, 1886 Mass. LEXIS 289
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 29, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 7 N.E. 703 (Stanchfield v. City of Newton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanchfield v. City of Newton, 7 N.E. 703, 142 Mass. 110, 1886 Mass. LEXIS 289 (Mass. 1886).

Opinion

Devens, J.

The plaintiff sought to recover upon two distinct grounds. First, that, being a riparian proprietor upon the brook, watercourse, ditch, or drain, (for it is called by all these names,) which flowed in the rear of his premises, be was entitled to the natural flow of water therein, and that such flow had been greatly increased in volume, and rendered foul, by the acts of the defendant; and, secondly, that, even if not a riparian proprietor, he was injured by the imperfect construction of the drain through Maple Place, by which the water from Church Street was intended to be conducted to the brook, and also by the defective preparation of the line of the brook, considered with reference to its channel, the means of discharge from it by a culvert, and the drainage brought to it, the land of the plaintiff in the vicinity having been overflowed, and injury to him thus occasioned.

There was evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, that a drainpipe had been extended along Church Street in the city of Newton for some seven hundred feet, whose only object was the collection of surface water; that the natural drainage of a portion of the territory was in a different direction from the plaintiff’s premises; and that in the rear of the plaintiff’s premises was a small brook or ditch. Whether it was a natural watercourse or not was in dispute, and also whether it was entirely outside of and beyond the plaintiff’s premises. There was further evidence that the drain in Church Street was connected with another drain-pipe, through which its waters passed, one hundred and eighty feet in length, that extended through Maple Place, a private way, by leave of the proprietors thereof, and terminated in a catch basin, from which water passed by overflow to the plaintiff’s premises; that this drain-pipe, at the time of the injuries of which the plaintiff complains, did not [112]*112extend to the brook or ditch; and that, the only connection being by a discontinued blind drain of rubble-stone and dirt, the water by reason of the flowage in rains or wet seasons rose to the surface, and spread over the plaintiff’s land.

There was further evidence that the land of the plaintiff had been flooded by the overflow of the brook or ditch, and that there was no sufficient outlet for the same; that the only outlet provided was by a culvert under Centre Street, which was insufficient, and which had also been permitted to become choked up; that, further, there was a drainage of surface water, not naturally coming there, near Centre Street; and that thus back water had been thrown upon the plaintiff’s land.

The evidence on behalf of the defendant more or less contradicted the said facts and causes of damage alleged by the plaintiff.

The second, third, and fourth requests for instructions were, in . substance, that the defendant could not lawfully collect from a great extent of country water not naturally coming near the plaintiff’s land, and, conducting it by an artificial channel through a private way, precipitate it upon the rear of his lot, with force and volume increased by the mode in which it was conducted and the extent of country from which it was drawn.

The seventh, eighth, and ninth requests for instructions were, in substance, that, if there was a natural watercourse or ditch, running in the rear of the plaintiff’s premises, which passed across Centre Street, the defendant was bound to make there a suitable culvert for the passage of the water which might naturally come there, or which might be brought there by the defendant’s acts and doings, as by the construction of a drain through Maple Place, and further to provide that it should not be obstructed; that, if there was a culvert maintained by private persons for more than twenty years, it was the duty of the defendant to see that it was not obstructed, even if the waters were not those of a natural watercourse; and also that, if by neglect in these respects the water overflowed or was thrown back upon the plaintiff’s premises, the defendant was responsible.

These last requests are apparently intended to present the inquiry as to the rights of the plaintiff, even if it be assumed that he was not a riparian proprietor. The requests do not [113]*113clearly distinguish between the two grounds upon which the plaintiff was entitled, upon the evidence, to present his case, and it would have been impossible to give them precisely as asked. In the instructions as given, this distinction was carefully made by the presiding judge, and it is to be considered whether, as given, they accurately and sufficiently cover the case as presented.

The first portion is devoted to considering the rights of the plaintiff as a riparian proprietor upon the brook. They hold that the city has no right to go beyond the limits of its highways, without the permission of the adjoining proprietors, for the disposal of its surface water; that, with the assent.of the owners of Maple Place, it might conduct the surface water by a drain therein, and, with the permission of the owners of the land through which the watercourse or ditch ran, might lawfully conduct such drain into the ditch, and so on to the culvert; that of all these acts the plaintiff would have no right to complain, unless he was a riparian owner, and thus had a right to the regular flow of. the waters of the brook. They conclude by saying: “ If you find that the plaintiff had no right in the brook as the owner of one of its banks, or because it was the boundary of his estate, and the city of Newton made a drain to carry off its surface water upon Church Street, continued it into Maple Place by the permission of the owners of Maple Place, and continued it then to Centre Street by permission of the owners of the land through which the brook passed, then the plaintiff cannot complain and make it a cause of injury that the brook or watercourse was so interfered with that the Water which flowed into it could not flow out of it.”

These instructions relate only to the claim of the plaintiff as a riparian proprietor, and show that, if not so, he is not entitled to complain of mere interference with the waters of the brook, or increase in their volume. They are irrespective of the rights which the plaintiff had as a landowner whose lands were remote from the brook or not immediately bordering on it, which are dealt with in the subsequent sentence. While they are negatively expressed, and state in what cases a party cannot recover, unless a riparian proprietor, for mere interference with the waters of the brook, that he may do so for this, if a riparian [114]*114proprietor, is clearly shown, especially when they are taken in connection with the earlier portion of the charge, which states that, if the plaintiff was a riparian proprietor, he had rights in that watercourse which gave him a cause of action against any person who prevented the flow of water in that watercourse, or the flow of water from his land by that watercourse, or befouled the water of that watercourse.”

These instructions give the plaintiff all that he was entitled to upon this part of the case. Even if we assume the contention of the plaintiff, that the defendant had not a right to collect the water from a larger area than was naturally drained by way of Church Street, of which there was some evidence, or then to conduct it by and through the lands immediately adjoining the highway into the brook, these acts of themselves afford no ground of complaint to any one except the owners of the land or riparian owners of the brook.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.E. 703, 142 Mass. 110, 1886 Mass. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanchfield-v-city-of-newton-mass-1886.