86 Va. 459 | Va. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first assignment of error is to the overruling of the demurrer on the ground that the court of equity had not jurisdiction of the remedy.
The court did not err in overruling the demurrer. On the 8th of September, 1884, the appellant, William Diffendal, who had become the owner of the land around and nearest the spring, after it had changed owners more than once, during the nearly ten years of the enjoyment by the railroad company of the easement or servitude of the water and the pipes, went to the said spring and drove a wooden plug into the pipe so as to cut off completely the supply of water to the depot of the railroad, which thereby suffered daily and hourly damage by having its employees and passengers cut off from the supply of water, and having at heavy daily outlay and inconvenience to provide water for drinking purposes and for their water closets or to have them closed up or used without water at the risk of becoming offensive and a nuisance to public health and comfort—an irreparable damage and public injury for which the railroad company had no adequate remedy at law—sounding simply in damages and an inconvenience, worry, loss, and risk
The second and third assignments of error go to the merits of the case upon the evidence. The court did not err in perpetuating the injunction. The pipe was laid many years before Diffendal purchased the land, and was so laid by the consent and under an agreement with the former owners, which was duly put to record. Diffendal purchased the land with full and actual knowledge that the pipe ran diagonally across the land in its route to the street, and that the topography of the land made it necessary that it should be located just where it was. Not only did he know when he purchased, that the water was conveyed by the pipe diagonally across the land which he purchased, and that it was so by contract between his vendors and the railroad company; but the fact was open and visible that the water from the spring was conveyed by a pipe, the proper and necessary location of which was along the ravine, where it was laid, and along the natural and fixed channel of the branch flowing from the spring. Diffendal bought the land with the full knowledge that a pipe carried the water from the spring to the railroad tank', and that to do so, it must follow the ravine, just where it is, or do the impossible feat of running up hill. Knowing this, he took thq land subject to the servitude which then, aud for long years, had existed upon the land in favor of the railroad company, imposed upon it by his grantors; and, taking it subject to such servitude, he cannot now ignore the rights of the railroad company so acquired and vested. The contract must be construed with reference' to the topography and to what was done at the time by the parties in locating the pipe; and in considering the relation of Diffendal, as a vendee from Millner & Walker, to the servitude rvhich his vendors had fixed upon the land by their contract with the railroad company, he will be presumed to have bought the land with reference to its condition at the
In the case of Outhawk v. Railroad Co., 71 New York, 197,
In Bannon v. Angler, 2 Allen, 128, Bigelow, J., says: “ Where a right of way, or other easement, is granted by deed without fixed and definite limits, the practical location and use of such way or easement by the grantee under his deed, acquiesced in by the grantor, at the time of the grant, and for a long time subsequent thereto, operate as an assignment of the right, and are deemed to be that which was intended to be conveyed by the deed, and are the same in legal effect as if it had been fully described by the terms of the grant.”
So long as the pipe is on Diffendal’s land it is seeking the street by the natural route of the topography, and as it was laid by the parties executing the contract; and the change of the location of the tank, from the north side to the south side of the railroad track (which was done with the knowledge and acquiescence of Milkier & Walker, and nearly ten years before Diffendal bought the lot), did not, in any way or degree, affect the position of the pipe; nor does the use of the water flowing through the pipe affect either the spring itself or the land under which the pipe is laid. Both remain the same, whether
The court very properly dismissed the petition for a rehearing of the case upon the affidavit of the witness Millner, who had testified and been elaborately cross-examined by appellant as to the transaction referred to in his affidavit. But even if there was reason for a rehearing, the petition was filed after the term of the court had ended, at which the decree had been entered. Hodges v. Davis, 4 H. & M., 400; Parker v. Logan, 82 Va. (7 Hansbrough), 376. Even if, however, the facts set forth in the petition were true, and it had been filed in time, they would not justify a rehearing or review of the case. We are of opinion that there is no error in the decree appealed from, and the same must be affirmed.
Decree aeeirmed.