Sullivan v. Browning

58 A. 302, 67 N.J. Eq. 391, 1 Robb. 391, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 73
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 26, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 A. 302 (Sullivan v. Browning) 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
Sullivan v. Browning, 58 A. 302, 67 N.J. Eq. 391, 1 Robb. 391, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 73 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C.

The hill alleges that the complainant owns a tract of land in the town of West Orange, “extending from the easterly side of Glen avenue, in Llewellyn Park, in an -easterly direction to the westerly line of Eagle Rock road,” and in 1898

“laid out a street or road over and across her said lands extending-the entire length thereof from Glen avenue to said Eagle .Kock road, and caused the same to be worked and graded and a map to be made of said [392]*392lands showing said street or road, whereon building lots were delineated fronting upon said street or road, which said street or road was designated upon said map and has since been known as Llewellyn avenue; and that since the making of said map the complainant has sold to various persons as many as twenty-two building lots upon either side of said Llewllyn avenue, having a frontage of twenty-five feet or more each upon said avenue, upon which lots a number of the owners thereof have constructed as many as sixteen dwelling-houses.”

The length, of Llewellyn avenue, from Glen avenue to said Eagle Rock road, is about one thousand four hundred feet. All of the lands fronting upon the northerly side of Llewellyn avenue are owned by the complainant and her grantees. The lands upon the southerly side of Llewellyn avenue, for a distance of five hundred and sixty feet from Eagle Rock road, are also' owned by the complainant and her grantees, and the rest of the frontage on the southerly side-of Llewellyn avenue, about eight hundred and fifty feet in length, is owned by the three defendants, devisees of Ross C. Browning, deceased, and was never owned by the complainant. The complainant is still the ownei of large portions of the lands on each side'of Llewellyn avenue.

The land over which Llewellyn-avenue is laid is about ninety-' two feet lower at Eagle Rock road than at Glen avenue, and the steepest grade is on the westerly portion, in front of the land of the defendants Browning. 'The general slope of the lands lying between Glen avenue and Eagle Rock road, through which Llewellyn avenue is laid out, and of the lands southerly therefrom, is in a southeasterly direction. The surface water from lands immediately south of Llewellyn avenue and from lands west of Glen avenue, if undiverted, flows in a southeasterly direction, and reaches Eagle Rock road or its continuation several hundred feet south of Llewellyn avenue. The complainant' has resided upon her lands for more than thirty years last past, and during all that period the surface water has followed the natural slope of the land in a southeasterly direction, over the land of the Brownings and away from the lands of the complainant. Since Llewellyn avenue was laid out it has not been until recently, and' from the slope of the lands cannot be "naturally, subject to the flow of .surface water from the lands of the defendants.

[393]*393The said Ross C. Browning, now deceased, in or about 1896, conveyed to the defendant Thomas N. Foster a parcel of land fronting upon the easterly side of Glen avenue, the northerly line of which parcel “is about two hundred and eighty-four feet in length, and runs parallel, or nearly so, with the southerly line of Llewellyn avenue, and about fifty feet southerly therefrom.” Ross G. Browning and Foster made an agreement, November 26th, 1896, to the effect that the strip of land belonging to Ross C. Browning north of the parcel conveyed to Foster “was to be used for a roadway to- lands to the east thereof,” or if not used for such purpose should be offered to said Foster for purchase. This agreement was recorded in the Essex county register’s office. It will not be necessarj' to set forth in detail the. relations between the defendants, the three Brownings and the defendant Foster, inasmuch as the case will be disposed of without reference to the above-mentioned agreement, and in the same way as if the Brownings owned the entire Foster tract.

The injury complained of consists in the construction by the defendants on their -land of “bunkers,” which are described as “artificially constructed mounds of earth raised above the elevation' of the surrounding land at a sufficient height to divert the flow of surface water.” These bunkers run in a direction so that if continued to said Llewellyn avenue +he3r would strike the same at an angle of about fortj^-five degrees, so that the wrnter intercepted by them is turned from its natural flow, in a southeaster^ direction, over-lands of the said Browning- and of said Foster, and is diverted in a northeasterly direction, towards and upon said Llewellyn avenue.'

There are four of these bunkers located on the land of the defendants, which have the effect to divert the surface water, as above stated, and cause it to flow into Llewellyn avenue. The damage complained of arises wholly from the increase in the flowage of water in and along Llewellyn avenue in times of rain. While before the construction of these bunkers the “flow'- of surface water down said' Ll-ewre!lyn avenue vras never, in the times of heaviest rains, or at any other time, sufficient to v'ash out or.injure the surface of LlewAllyn avenue,, or the gutters [394]*394or walks thereof, or the property” of the complainant fronting on Llewellyn avenue, since the construction of the bunkers “vast and unusual quantities of surface water diverted by said bunkers flow down the said Llewellyn avenue and undermine and wash away and injure Llewellyn avenue and the gutters and walks thereof, and wash over and injure the property” of the complainant “fronting thereon.”

The bill alleges that “said Llewellyn avenue is not a public street and has not been acquired by the said town of West Orange, and the title to the land within the lines of said avenue is vested” in the complainant and her grantees to the centre line of the avenue, subject to the easement of the complainant and her grantees “to use the same as a street for ingress and egress,” and that no’ person except the complainant and her grantees “has any right, interest, easement or control in or over the lands in said avenue.”

1. I think it is a serious question whether, upon this demurrer, Llewellyn avenue must not be considered as a public highway, unaccepted by the public authorities but subjected to the public easement of travel. The facts are abundantly stated at the commencement of the bill of complaint, from which the legal inference must be drawn that Llewellyn avenue is a public street in the sense above stated. Subsequently the bill alleges that Llewellyn avenue is not a public street, and has not been acquired'by the town of West Orange. Ho explanation is offered of the facts first set forth, which fix the character of this avenue as a public highway. In my opinion, there are strong grounds for holding that, taking this bill as a whole, the allegation that Llewellyn avenue is not a public street must be deemed a mere statement of a legal conclusion and an erroneous conclusion based upon the idea that before the street could be subjected to the public easement it must in some way have been “acquired by the said town of West Orange.” Ordinarily, an allegation in the bill of complaint that a roadway was merely a private right of way and not a public street, would be deemed an allegation of fact, and would be admitted to be true by a demurrer, but when a bill alleges facts which show that the roadway is a public [395]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 A. 302, 67 N.J. Eq. 391, 1 Robb. 391, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-browning-njch-1904.