49 A.2d 640 | Md. | 1946
Masie Hacker, widow, owner of a lot of ground on Cator Avenue in Baltimore, improved by a dwelling and a concrete-block garage in the rear, instituted this suit against Thomas Mullan, Sr., Thomas Mullan, Jr., Charles Mullan and Joseph Mullan, individually and trading as Thomas Mullan Sons, to recover damages to her garage alleged to have been caused by their negligence in underpinning it while excavating on their adjacent land.
At the trial of the case before a jury in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, it was shown that the garage, which was divided by four partition walls to accommodate five automobiles, was built in 1922, and in 1942 defendants, undertaking to build a row of houses on the south side of Forty-first Street and to lay out an alley in the rear, employed workmen to excavate a bank of earth along the southern end of their land near the garage. To support the north wall of the garage, the workmen built an underpinning of stone; and to protect the east wall, they erected a high retaining wall. Plaintiff and her witnesses testified that before the excavation the garage was in good condition; but after the excavation the north wall moved three or four inches out of plumb, the walls cracked, the rafters pulled out from the walls, and the roof fell in. The jury brought in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $3,000, but upon motion for a new trial plaintiff filed a remittitur for $1,125, and judgment was thereupon entered for $1,875. From that judgment defendants appealed to this Court.
It is an ancient principle of the common law that every owner of land has to right to lateral support from the adjoining soil, and if a landowner removes the earth from his own land so near the land of his neighbor that his neighbor's soil will crumble away under its own weight, he is liable for damages so occasioned. The original theory of lateral support in England was that it was an easement subjecting the adjoining land to a natural servitude. Under that theory it was not necessary to prove any negligence to establish liability, because the right *266
was violated merely by removal of support. In the course of time, however, there developed the theory that the right to lateral support is a right of property naturally attached to the soil.Foley v. Wyeth, 2 Allen (Mass.) 131, 79 Am. Dec. 771, 772. Under this theory it was necessary to show negligence or intention to cause injury. Neither of these conflicting theories, as the American Law Institute has stated, has unqualifiedly prevailed. The two views of the nature of the right of lateral support of land have each contributed to the present law. The ancient view left its influence on the law in so far as the right in respect to the land itself in its natural condition is absolute. 4 Restatement, Torts, 185, 186. We reaffirm the statement made by Judge Alvey in 1875 in his opinion inBaltimore Potomac R. Co. v. Reaney,
It is well settled, however, that the right of lateral support applies only to the soil in its natural condition. It does not apply to buildings on the land. Northern Transportation Co. v.City of Chicago,
It is usually a requirement of due care for an owner of land, who intends to make an excavation thereon and is about to endanger a building on the land of his neighbor, to notify his neighbor of the intended improvement and afford him an opportunity to take precautions to protect his building. Lasalav. Holbrook, 4 Paige (N.Y.) 169, 25 Am. Dec. 524; Schultz v.Byers,
Plaintiff testified that at the time of the excavation there was a steady rain for three days, and the ditch under the central part of the garage was left open five or six days, and it was so muddy that the workmen were unable to put in any more underpinning. Her daughter, Mrs. Edna Franks, recalled that the rain at the time of the excavation was "one of those hard blowing rains, and it came right from the north, and just washed right in under the garage, and as it washed under, it washed the dirt out and the dirt ran down where the alley is now." Mrs. Franks explained how that the workmen "had dug some of it out, and had built a little up, but they hadn't gotten up under the garage in order to support the garage." William Spencer, who built the garage for plaintiff and her husband, was positive in his opinion that the settling of its walls resulted from the fact that the stone underpinning had been laid on soft dirt or else the earth had washed out from beneath the garage after the stone had been put in. Evidence as to *269 the condition of the weather at the time excavation was made is relevant and material, since what would be prudent and careful operation in dry weather might be negligent and reckless in wet weather, softening and weakening the soil. 1 Am. Jur., AdjoiningLandowners, Sec. 27. It is our conclusion that the evidence of negligence in this case was legally sufficient for consideration of the jury.
Defendants also urged that there was no proof that their work was the proximate cause of the damage. At the trial of the case the building inspector assigned to this job denied that he could say what had caused the settling of the walls. But the Chief Building Inspector of Baltimore, Milton W. Ford, testified without hestitation that the damage could not have been caused by anything other than a settling of the walls, and necessarily that must have resulted from defendants' excavation, because a gradual settling would have been complete in less than 20 years after the garage was built. It is a well established rule that damages cannot be recovered unless the negligent act complained of is the direct and continuing cause of the injury without the intervention of any independent factor. Bloom v. Good Humor IceCream Co.,
There is no question that the measure of damages for property is the cost of restoring it, if it can be restored to the condition it was in before the injury without cost disproportionate to the injury; but where the cost of restoring is greater than the diminution in the market value, the correct measure is the difference between the value of the property before the injury and after. Brown v. Werner,
Finally, defendants objected to the following hypothetical question asked W.G. Michaelman, contractor: "Assuming that in June, 1942, before Mr. Mullan began this construction work, Mrs. Hacker had this five-car garage there, which had been built in 1922 at a cost of $1,300, and assuming that some work was done by Mr. Hacker at the value of $350, and that the garage has been there from that time until June, 1942, and that in June, 1942, the roof did not leak and there were no cracks in the north and east walls other than frost cracks, and the east wall was not separated from the concrete floor, and there was no damage to the roof of the building, and the garage was built of concrete blocks, and it had an asphalt roof with a tar coating, and the north and east walls were not out of plumb, and the joists were made of 2 by 8 lumber and were in proper position, and allowing for normal depreciation of a garage of that type, are you able to tell the market value of that building in June, 1942?"
Defendants objected to this question on the ground that it did not specifically describe the condition of the walls and other parts of the garage. The rule is firmly established that a hypothetical question must contain all material facts in evidence essential to the formation of a rational opinion. MathiesonAlkali Works v. Redden,
Unquestionably Michaelman was qualified to testify as an expert. He had been a contractor and builder for 40 years, and he had also served for many years on committees to appraise real estate for building associations of which he was a director. Moreover, he was familiar with the plaintiff's garage from personal observation. He had inspected it on two occasions after the damages were incurred. He testified that he had made careful examinations of its walls. He gave assurance, after the court had received testimony that the garage was in good condition in June, 1942, that he could tell what its value was at that time. He thereupon estimated its value at $2,000. We find no prejudicial error in the introduction of this estimate, especially since it was lower than Spencer's. The building is a simple form of construction, with which the witness was thoroughly familiar, and under these circumstances we think the question was admissible. We do not mean to decide, however, that such a question to a witness with such belated acquaintance with the building would be admissible in other cases involving more complicated construction. Abromatis v. Amos,
As the estimates made by the expert witnesses were admissible, the jury had sufficient evidence of the garage's value to which the measure of damages could be applied.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *273