Third Buckingham Community, Inc. v. Anderson

17 S.E.2d 433, 178 Va. 478, 1941 Va. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 24, 1941
DocketRecord No. 2416
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 S.E.2d 433 (Third Buckingham Community, Inc. v. Anderson) 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
Third Buckingham Community, Inc. v. Anderson, 17 S.E.2d 433, 178 Va. 478, 1941 Va. LEXIS 183 (Va. 1941).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In October, 1939, the defendant in error, Ivan W. Anderson, instituted an action at law by notice of motion for judgment against the plaintiff in error and two allied corporations, claiming damages for injuries to a large garden and plant bed operation, occasioned by the collection of surface water in an artificial channel and depositing it in a concentrated form with great force and violence upon his said garden and plant beds. The parties will be referred to generally hereafter as plaintiff and defendant, their relation in the trial court.

The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000.00. The court, by placing the plaintiff upon terms, reduced the amount of the damages to the sum of $873.00, which is the aggregate of the values which the plaintiff put upon the property injured and destroyed, which the plaintiff accepted under protest. The evidence is not much in conflict, but to the extent that it is so, under familiar rules, we are obliged to accept that version that is most favorable to the plaintiff.

The plaintiff has owned a tract of two and one-half acres of land for approximately eight years, and as owner and lessee has had to do with it for about fifteen years. The major part of his business was raising plants of hardy horticultural varieties for sale. His business appears to have been successful and profitable until the happenings which are the subject of this suit.

The defendant owns a tract of twenty-six acres of land which it acquired in 1938, which lies above that of the plaintiff. It at once began the utilization of its lands by erecting- large apartment houses and locating and relocating- and constructing roadways and streets and installing a system of artificial drainage.

For drainage purposes of his own the plaintiff had dug a ditch through his property and placed a twelve inch pipe under his roadway. This means was quite sufficient to meet his needs. During his occupancy through [482]*482all of the years until 1938, he suffered nothing untoward or disastrous from flood waters. It was only after the developments of the defendant that his ills of that nature came. In all the time referred to the surface waters from rains and snows went off gradually over a wide surface and that portion of its volume which was not consumed by sinking or evaporation found its way to the swale or depression natural to the topography of the land and was taken care of by the ditch and pipe installed by the plaintiff.

The defendant soon became troubled by the collection of water in its cellars and it appears to have made a strenuous effort to correct this evil and in doing so it brought about the damage complained of by the plaintiff. The extent of this is realized when his testimony is noted and its effect fully appreciated. The defendant put in and through its lands to within a few inches of the land of the plaintiff a pipe two feet in diameter. It so arranged its drainage system as to collect the surface water from rains falling- directly on the ground and that falling on the roofs of the large and extensive apartment houses and put them in concentrated form into this pipe, which gained momentum and force as it was added to by the water which issued from catch basins and other smaller pipes. Its force was so great at the end of the pipe in the fall of 1939, that the area of which the plaintiff’s land was a part was flooded as it had never been before. It overflowed his driveway so that at one point it was impassable. The debris was in some places four inches deep which covered most of his plant beds. It washed away his pots and plants and a cold frame 75 feet long and 6' feet wide, made of cinder blocks heavily constructed. Some of this debris was washed 15 feet away. The plaintiff testified that the defendant added so much more drainage area to that which nature had created that even this large pipe was inadequate, and that the water tore up a' cement walk. He further testified that in the September, 1939, storm the debris was [483]*483so great that the ditch which he had dug on the side of his driveway was completely filled up. The plaintiff submitted a list of the items of damage and we do not understand that its correctness is seriously questioned.

An examination of the maps in evidence shows that the southern boundary of land of the plaintiff and a portion of that of the defendant borders on Lee Boulevard; that the northern boundary of the defendant’s land is adjacent to North Henderson Road and through the middle of its lands is North Pershing Drive. These three ways are practically parallel. The last two when prolonged extend to what is known as G-lebe Road. There was an old street running at right angles' with Lee Boulevard, then Thomas Street, which is now known as Trenton Street. Down this street flowed the water, when there was rain, which did not touch the plaintiff’s land. The defendant changed the flow of this water by the construction of a new way called Second Road. Its course was changed to flow east and eventually into the large pipe. Third Street North is another new road over which the water is made to flow until it reaches what is called a turnaround which, as its name indicates, turns the water eastwardly, being augmented by that collected in catch basins, which finally gets into the large pipe.

Again, it was testified that some distance east of North Trenton Street there is a natural crest and a contour map put in evidence by the defendant shows that some of the water flowed west of this crest and some east, that going west not reaching the plaintiff’s property, but changes made by the defendant caused all of this water to pass through this pipe and onto the plaintiff’s lands. This statement is borne out by the testimony of the plaintiff who is corroborated, in the main, by the testimony of Mr. Pomeroy. He is a landowner whose lands adjoin those of the plaintiff on the north and on the west. He testified that there was no overflow on his or the plaintiff’s land at the time of the very severe [484]*484storms of 1933, but that after tbe defendant acquired its property and began its developments, including its system of drainage, tbe storms in 1939, particularly tbe heavy rains about the last of August or the first of September, the waters of which were collected and deposited in concentrated form, caused the damage to which the plaintiff testified. He graphically described the nature of the debris as “rock and clods of dirt, potted plants and pots from Mr. Anderson’s property, large rocks, fairly large rocks, six or eight inches in diameter, and they were strewn practically the full width of the property”. This debris was left on Mr. Pomeroy’s property.

Certainly this was credible testimony which undoubtedly amply supports the verdict of the jury. It is difficult for a lay person to comprehend and accurately state the effect of the testimony concerning the maps and their indicia. However, certain large facts stand out in bold relief. ‘One is that the plaintiff suffered no damage caused by water until the defendant arrived and put in motion its concomitants.

Another of these facts is that the defendant collected the surface waters in and discharged them from a large pipe, which form it had not hitherto assumed. Another highly potent fact is that the jury viewed the entire premises; they saw the lay of the lands, the streets, the ways, the drainage system and the incident conditions which were the subjects of the testimony, before arriving at their verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E.2d 433, 178 Va. 478, 1941 Va. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/third-buckingham-community-inc-v-anderson-va-1941.