West Arlington Improvement Co. v. Mount Hope Retreat in Balto County

54 A. 982, 97 Md. 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 54 A. 982 (West Arlington Improvement Co. v. Mount Hope Retreat in Balto County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Arlington Improvement Co. v. Mount Hope Retreat in Balto County, 54 A. 982, 97 Md. 191 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A bill in equity was filed by the appellees against the appellants asking for an injunction to restrain them “from polluting and contaminating the water flowing into the lake of your orators, and especially forbiding the use by the West Arlington Improvement Company of the pipes laid by them for the discharge of sewage matter from adjoining houses, or any houses, into the sources of the stream flowing into complainant’s lake, and from laying further pipes for the discharge of sewage in the same manner and from doing anything the direct result of which will be the necessary contamination of the water so flowing into complainant’s lake,” etc. The bill also prays that the individual defendants be restrained from discharging sewage and water closet contents, or other foul and offensive matter, from their respective houses into the stream supplying complainant’s lake, or into the sources of said stream, or in such manner that they are directly emptied into it. A preliminary injunction was granted and, after hearing, a decree was passed making the injunction perpetual. From that decree this appeal was taken.

It is alleged in the bill and admitted by the answer that the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph, a religious association formed for the purpose of carrying on works of piety, charity and usefulness, and especially for the care of the sick, the succor of the aged, infirm and necessitous persons, were incorporated by chapter 95 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Mary *199 land, for the year 1816. They acquired tracts of land by three deeds, dated in 1856, 1858 and 1873 respectively, and by the Act of 1870, chapter 65, certain Sisters of Charity were incorporated under the name and style of Mount Hope Retreat in Baltimore County, and thereupon the possession of all the lands referred to and the management, supervision and control of the same, together with the hospital building and appurtenances thereunto belonging, were turned over to the Sisters of Charity so incorporated, and the care of the sick and afflicted being treated therein confided to them. It is alleged that there was, when the complainants first became possessed of the premises, “a stream of water of good and wholesome character running through said grounds westerly of the hospital buildings, and some distance therefrom, the sources of which are chiefly beyond the limits of complainant’s grounds, and which flows through land now owned by the West Arlington Improvement Company.” It is contended on the part of the appellants that there was not a living stream of water running through the lands of the Improvement Company when it purchased them and laid them out into streets, avenues, lots, etc., but the evidence abundantly shows that there was such stream and Mr. Rossiter, the farmer of the appellees, testified: "It is sufficient to supply the demands of the institution for all purposes at all times in the year.” It is not necessary to refer to other testimony on that subject, as we are convinced that it is a well established fact in the case. In 1881 and 1882 the appellees constructed a lake in and along the bed of the stream, so as to accumulate water and by means of a steam pump and pipes conveyed it to the hospital buildings. About 1895 a larger pump was placed there and the cisterns into which the water is pumped have a considerable capacity. Mr. Rossiter said: “When the lake was first constructed, to all appearances and to our knowledge, the stream was pure; that is as pure as any ordinary stream would be in the country,” and that “Its condition has been for the last two years or more filthy; there is a visible sewage, that is (dis) charged from the West Arlington property into this *200 stream.” That testimony is in substance sustained by other witnesses. ' The West Arlington Company has laid in some of its streets terra cotta pipes from eight to twenty-four inches in diameter, and there is a system of sewers and open drains which conduct the sewage and other things coming from the houses with which they are connected into this stream, and much of them eventually gets into the lake. The secretary of the Arlington Company says the sewers “were constructed to carry off the water and closet stuff.” The water taken from the lake is contaminated by sewage, although the appellants deny that they are responsible for its condition, as we will see in the discussion of the defenses made by them. There are between six and seven hundred inmates of the hospital—many of them insane—besides about one hundred employees of different kinds. The appellants deny that the appellees are entitled to the aid of a Court of equity, and assign a number of reasons for their position.

i. It is contended that the appellees have not come into Court with clean hands. In the first place it is said that they had no right to make a lake on the stream and divert the water. It is not denied that they have the rights of a riparian owner. As such they unquestionably have the right to make such use of the water as belongs to one who owns the land through which such a stream runs. The general rule is that each of the riparian proprietors is entitled to a reasonable use oí the water for domestic, agricultural .and manufacturing purposes, and what is reasonable with respect to the rights of others must depend upon circumstances, such as the character and size of the stream and the. uses to which it can be applied. One of the common uses of a stream which is not navigable, is to detain and obstruct its flow with dams in order to utilize the water power, and hence it cannot be said that building a lake in a stream is necessarily interfering with the rights of others. Each case must largely depend upon its own peculiar facts, so far as the quantity that can be taken is concerned, and here there is not only a total absence of evidence to show that any one is injured by the use the appellees *201 make of this water, but, although this plan has been in operation for about twenty years, 'there is not a suggestion of complaint from any one. For aught that appears the appellees may have acquired from the lower riparian proprietors all rights they had, or the latter may be perfectly satisfied with such diversion of water as there is. So without deeming it necessary to determine to what extent an institution of this kind can use water out of a stream running through its lands, for the purposes for which this is' used, there is nothing in the record from which we could say that it is being used in such way as to make it so inequitable on the part of the appellees as to deny them any relief against an upper riparian owner that they would otherwise be entitled to.

2. Then it is said that the appellees pollute the water thus taken to their hospital, and then eventually turn it upon others in that polluted condition. What we have just said applies with equal force to this contention. The sewage from the hospital is emptied into another stream which eventually reaches Gwynn’s Falls. There is nothing to show the character of that stream, after it leaves the Mount Hope property, how it is used, if at all, by others, or whether the pollution from Mount Hope does in fact injure it, or any person, or whether the rights of any riparian owners that ever did exist have been acquired by the appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 982, 97 Md. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-arlington-improvement-co-v-mount-hope-retreat-in-balto-county-md-1903.