Rittenhouse v. Newhard
Rittenhouse v. Newhard
Opinion of the Court
This bill was for an injunction to restrain the defendant from shutting off the flow of water in a pipe that extended from a spring on his land to the land of an adjoining owner, and thence to the plaintiffs’ properties in a village near by. The rights claimed by the plaintiffs were based on the allegation that a verbal agreement had been made between them and the defendant for the construction and maintenance of the line of pipe. This allegation was not sustained by proof.
The material findings of fact are that prior to 1888 the water from a spring on the defendant’s land ran in an open channel some 1,500 feet in length to the property of the Mountain Grove Camp Meeting Association where it was collected in a small reservoir for the use of the association. From that reservoir, a pipe extended to the houses of the plaintiffs. In 1888, the association wishing to obtain a purer supply of water, entered into a verbal agreement with the defendant by which it was permitted to enter on his land and dig a ditch and lay a pipe from the spring to the line of its property and it agreed to lay a branch pipe from the main line on defendant’s land to his
The bill was properly dismissed because of the failure to establish the agreement on which the right to equitable relief was based. The contention that the bill should have been sustained on the grounds of ratification and estoppel is without merit. There was proof of neither, nor of any facts from which either would arise. But if there had been proof, the bill could not have been sustained. Relief cannot be granted for matter not alleged: Luther v. Luther, 216 Pa. 1.
The decree is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Equity — Injunction—Failure to establish matter alleged. 1. A bill in equity for an injunction to restrain the defendant from shutting off the flow of water in a pipe is properly dismissed where there is a failure to establish the agreement between the plaintiff and defendant for the maintenance of the supply on which the right to equitable relief was based. Equity — Equitable relief — Matter not alleged. 2. Where the right to the equitable relief prayed for in a bill in equity is based upon an agreement between the parties, which agreement was' not proven, a contention that the bill should be sustained on the grounds of ratification and estoppel is without merit where such grounds are not averred in the bill. Relief cannot be granted for matter not alleged.