247 Mass. 325 | Mass. | 1924
The plaintiffs and the defendant are owners of adjoining premises occupied respectively as a residence. This bill is brought for relief against acts alleged to have been committed by the defendant which caused the land of the plaintiffs to be undermined and to cave in, and certain structures upon it to be thereby damaged.
The case was referred to a master, who found that the plaintiffs built upon their land, along a portion of the dividing line between their land and that of the defendant, a wall and a concrete walk; that afterwards the defendant dug a trench in his lot along the face of the wall for its entire length, and immediately adjacent to it, and that in some places he cut beneath the wall itself; that he then connected corrugated iron pipes with a conductor from the roof of his house in such a way that water from the roof drained into the trench and ran down by and under the wall and undermined it to such an extent that in places it fell down, the concrete walk was caused to be badly cracked, and a post supporting the rear piazza of the plaintiffs’ house has settled. He also recites: “ I find that the digging of the trench by the defendant was not for a temporary purpose, nor for the erection of a structure on the defendant’s land, but solely for the purpose of receiving the water which ran from the defendant’s roof and conducting the same along the line of the wall to a point in the rear of the defendant’s lot and I further find that this trench was dug with a reckless disregard of the consequences of such digging, and that as a result thereof the defendant has removed the lateral subjacent support of the plaintiffs’ land and of the structures thereon and undermined the same, and has caused the land of the plaintiffs and the structures thereon, consisting of a concrete walk and a wall, to cave in and to be thrown down.” The master further found that by reason of the trench and the
No appeal having been taken from the interlocutory decree overruling the defendant’s exceptions to the master’s report, they are not before us, unless and so far as they are necessarily involved in the final decree. Clapp v. Gardner, 237 Mass. 187, 191. As the evidence is not reported the master’s findings must stand.
Although the defendant did not appeal from the decree overruling the exceptions to the report, he was entitled to argue upon this appeal from the final decree that on the facts found by the master the decree was unwarranted. Fay v. Corbett, 233 Mass. 403, 410.
The rule is well settled that for an excavation causing an injury to the soil in its natural state of an adjoining owner an action will lie, but that in the absence of proof of a right by grant or prescription in the plaintiff, or of actual negligence on the part of the defendant, no action will lie for an injury to structures by excavating adjoining land not previously built upon. Thurston v. Hancock, 12 Mass. 220. Foley v. Wyeth, 2 Allen, 131. Gilmore v. Driscoll, 122 Mass. 199.
Although the question, whether negligent acts of the defendant on his land would render him liable for injuries to structures on the land of the plaintiff, was expressly left open in Gilmore v. Driscoll, supra, 207, such liability was determined in Hopkins v. American Pneumatic Service Co. 194 Mass. 582. See also Hartshorn v. Tobin, 244 Mass. 334.
Apart from the finding that the defendant dug the trench in his own land the master also found that in some places he cut beneath the wall itself, that is to say that he dug upon the land of the plaintiffs. The findings are sufficient to establish liability for damage to the structures on the land of the plaintiffs.
The contention of the defendant that the final decree does not conform to the allegations and prayers of the bill is without merit.
The further contention that it was beyond the authority of the master to determine the boundary line between the lands of the parties and that the plaintiffs should have petitioned to the Land Court for that purpose cannot be sustained. The relief sought is for a continuing tort in the nature of trespass and for damages resulting from the past acts of the defendant. The determination of the questions in issue involved the ascertainment of the dividing line between the lands of the parties; that question was in dispute and the evidence upon it as appears from the master’s report was conflicting. If the plaintiff were obliged to go to the Land Court and there have the boundary fine established, it would follow.that no proceeding in law or equity where a trespass to real estate was involved, and the boundary fine was in dispute, could be brought until the plaintiff had first petitioned to the Land Court, and had there caused his boundary line to be established and his title registered. That such a contention is unsound is too clear for discussion.
It is plain that upon the facts found by the master the plaintiffs are entitled to the relief prayed for in the bill.
Decree affirmed.