(dissenting). There are two statements in the opinion of Mr. Justice Brooke, controlling of the conclusion which he reaches, which I think find no support whatever in the record. Those statements are:
“In what we have to say hereinafter, it will be borne in mind that the complainant village has no sewage system. That it is not claimed by defendant that by reason of urban improvements, raising, grading streets, etc., therein, the natural course of the surface water has been diverted upon his land, or that the volume thereof has been increased by any act of complainant. He specifically admits in his answer that the water in question has flowed across his land from time immemorial.”
The land is not in a state of nature. It is in an incorporated village, which, according to the last census, had upwards of 1,200 inhabitants. The block in question is built upon with houses and barns. The village has a system of underground drainage, adopted and constructed by village authority. This is expressly charged in the bill of complaint, which further charges that the water collected in this system is discharged upon the land of defendant by consent of the owner thereof. What is charged in the bill, and what defendant specifically admits, is not that the water in question has flowed across his land from time immemorial, but that — I quote from the bill — “from time immemorial the land * * * has been drained when not interfered with artifically ” across the land of defendant. It is not claimed on the part of the village that it ever acquired the right to discharge upon defend*25ant’s land the water collected by its drainage system except by consent of the owner of the land, and it appears from the statement of one of the solicitors for complainant, found in the record, that no question was involved at the hearing “except whether or not this,” the alleged consent of the owner, “was a license or whether we had a right to maintain it because we went upon that by consent.” The court found, upon abundant and apparently undisputed testimony, that the village had a mere parol license from the owner of the land to so discharge water on the land, and that the license had been revoked. As the bill charged the owner with interfering with the discharge of water on his premises, and prayed for a perpetual injunction to restrain such interference, it would seem that a decree dismissing the bill was properly entered. The revocation of the license terminated the rights of the village in the premises. Nowlin Lumber Co. v. Wilson, 119 Mich. 406 (78 N. W. 338).
But it was intimated on the argument that complainant did not rely solely upon the alleged license. If we were to assume, in the face of the charge in the bill, that the village expended large sums of money in constructing a system of artificial drainage, in reliance upon an alleged consent of the owner of the property to receive the water so collected, that the village intended also to assert a right to have the waters go as they would have gone if the land was in a state of nature, the complainant has no better case. Whether the rule applicable to rural property and conditions should be applied in this case does not depend upon the simplicity or complexity of the system of drainage established in the village of Trenton. The court may, and should, take judicial notice of the fact that after the building of a village upon land the land is no longer in a state of nature, and there is and can be of necessity no such thing in fact as that natural percolation and flow of surface water which existed before the village was built. It is said by tbia court in Boyd v. Conklin, 54 Mich. 583 (20 N. W. 595, 52 Am. Rep. 831):
*26“A number of the most striking cases cited by plaintiff’s counsel in support of his appeal, as laying down the broadest doctrine, and as relied upon in a good share of his other citations, were cases where the lands were in towns and cities, and the erections or acts in litigation referred to the uses of that class of property. And in relying on these it was claimed that there was no substantial foundation for any distinction between urban and rural property. There is no question but that such a distinction is recognized in the civil-law authorities referred to on the argument, as well as in several of the cases cited. The distinction is one of substance and not arbitrary. As already suggested, the adjoining owners owe mutual duties — the one to receive the natural flow, and the other not to injuriously change its conditions. It is obvious that tira laying out of town streets and the multiplication of buildings cannot avoid making serious changes in the surface of the ground and in the condition of surface water. Grades must usually be established for streets and sidewalks, and pavements and other surface changes are usual, in addition to the walls of buildings which, with their embankments, must obstruct or change the drainage. It is almost universally expected and provided that sewerage and drainage shall be regulated by some municipal standard. There cannot be towns without changing the face of the land materially. And where the same rule has been applied to towns as to the country, it has, in some cases at least, been done expressly, because in the circumstances of the record the particular land in question had remained under rural conditions. If — as seems to be true —some decisions ignore the distinction, they depart from the old rule, and cannot be maintained as harmonious with the general line of authority, unless on special facts which do not justify their broad dicta”
Whether in any case, as between proprietors of adjoining lands in a village, the rule applicable to rural property should be held to apply, we need not determine. Here the village — the municipality — is asserting the right to flow the land of one member of the community with water gathered in underground conduits, for the benefit of the community. This it may not lawfully do.
In so far as the court below held that the village had no right to discharge, by means of its artificial drainage, water *27upon the lands of defendant, and therefore dismissed the bill of complaint, the decree is right and should be affirmed. But the decree goes further than this. The purpose of the bill has been stated. The decree requires the village to remove from defendant’s property the underground tiling or crocks placed there by the complainant under the license from the owner, and to discontinue the use of the property for the purpose set up in the bill of complaint or for any purpose whatsoever within 90 days from the date of the decree. The village has removed the tiling or crocks from defendant’s premises, but it appears by the record in certain contempt proceedings instituted by the defendant, that the village has not ceased to cast the water from its drainage system upon the defendant’s land. For this the court held the village to be in contempt. The village then appealed from the original decree. The action of the village authorities has made the requirement that the tile be removed from defendant’s land unimportant. As to the other requirement, namely, that the village, in 90 days, discontinue the use of defendant’s premises, the decree requires only what the complainant ought to do. If the time allowed was too short, it should have applied for some modification of the decree. Its right to use the premises being denied, it should stop using them. Defendant asked for no áffirmative relief in the answer, and did not ask in the court below or in this court to amend the answer. We therefore are constrained to limit the relief by decree to the dismissal of the bill. But, in view of the considerations above stated, we decline to award any costs to appellant.
Moore and Stone, JJ., concurred with Ostrander, J.