32 N.Y.S. 371 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
This action was brought to obtain an injunction restraining the defendant from maintaining and continuing sewers, culverts, and drains, which, it was claimed, diverted the natural flow of surface water, and cast it, together with sewage, in excessive volumes, upon the plaintiff’s property, and also to recover damages incident to such acts. The village of Dobbs Ferry was incorporated in the year 1873, and is built upon a hillside, which slopes to the west and south. The plaintiff’s property lies at the foot of the hill, and is bounded upon the west by the land of the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company and the Hudson river. It receives the natural flow of surface water from a large territory, upon which the village is in part built, which is indicated upon a map printed in the case. The village has opened and graded streets, paved the gutters, and set the curbs, and constructed drains and culverts. The population has also increased, and upon many of the private grounds within the village roads have been constructed, with gutters and drains, which receive the flow of surface water, and discharge into the public streets. Plaintiff’s property is bounded on the east by Palisade street. Next to the east, and further up the hill, is Main street. These two streets run in a general direction north and south from Cedar to Chestnut street. Other streets run to the east out of Main street. All the water flowing down the hill through the main streets is concentrated at a point on the easterly side of Palisade avenue, across which it flows through a covered drain, which is continued through private property to the land of Mr. Lange. Thence it flows in an open waterway across Lange’s property, and is finally discharged into a private drain upon plaintiff’s land. West of Main street the drain is constructed along the bottom of a natural depression in the land, and the open waterway through Lange’s land is a natural water course, to the point where it connects with plaintiff’s drain. The testimony introduced by the plaintiff would justify the conclusion that, since the incorporation of the village, the volume of water discharged upon plaintiff’s land
We agree with the conclusion reached by the special term. The rules of law applicable to cases of this character are well settled. Municipal corporations are liable for damages occasioned by acts resulting in the creation of public or private nuisances, or for an unlawful entry upon property of another, whereby injury is caused; and no immunity from liability results from statutory power conferred upon the corporation, the exercise of which results in the appropriation of or physical injury to private property. Within this rule, such corporations may not, by the construction of sewers or drains, collect sewage, and deposit it upon the premises of an individual, nor can they, by constructing streets and gutters, collect in a body surface water, which would not naturally flow in that direction, and discharge it upon private property. Bastable v. City of Syracuse, 8 Hun, 587; Byrnes v. City of Cohoes, 67 N. Y. 204; Noonan v. City of Albany, 79 N. Y. 470; Seifert v. City of Brooklyn, 101 N. Y. 136-143, 4 N. E. 321. But a municipal corporation is not liable for consequential damages to a landowner caused by the discharge of surface water upon his property, and which is the result solely of the grading of streets and highways in pursuance of legislative authority. Wilson v. Mayor, etc., 1 Denio, 595; Kavanagh v. City of Brooklyn, 38 Barb. 232; Lynch v. Mayor, etc., 76 N. Y. 60; Birdsall v. Clark, 7 Hun, 351.
The testimony in this case does not show that the defendant has constructed any sewers in any of the public streets of the village. Undoubtedly, a large amount of filth and obnoxious substance has been cast upon plaintiff’s property; but, so far as is disclosed in the evidence, it consisted solely of substance accumulated in the streets and gutters, and carried by the large flow of water to the foot of the natural watershed. Neither does the testimony show that, by the grading of any of the streets, the flow of the surface water has been diverted from its natural course. The construction of the culvert under Palisade street had no other effect than to conduct under the street the water which, in the absence of the culvert, would have flowed across the surface. The plaintiff’s witness Cozzens testified that, before the street was graded, the water ran on the surface at that point. He said: “It found its way over what is now Palisade street, into the property that now belongs to Mr. Morton. * * * As soon as they used wagons there, they put a culvert there.” The time of which the witness spoke was prior to the incorporation of the village. He further testified, speaking of the present time: “If that sewer were not there, the water would, nevertheless, have flowed down over that water course, and on the plaintiff’s property.” The increase in the size of the culvert has no material relation to the plaintiff’s complaint. It was at first constructed of too small dimensions, and failed to carry off all the water flowing on the street.