35 Mich. 296 | Mich. | 1877
The action in this case was instituted to recover damages for an injury caused to the house of plaintiff by the cutting of a sewer under the direction of the city authorities, and under city legislation the validity of which is not disputed. The necessary result of cutting the sewer, the plaintiff claims, was, to collect and. throw large quantities of water upon his premises which otherwise would not have flowed upon them; and it is for an injury thereby caused that he sues. The evidence offered on the part of the plaintiff tended to establish the case he declared upon, but the court instructed the jury that though they should find the facts to be as the plaintiff claimed, they must still return a verdict for the defendant. The ground of this decision, as we understand it, was, that the city, in ordering the construction of the sewer and in constructing it, was acting in the exercise of its legislative and discretionary
In Pontiac v. Carter, 32 Mich., 164, the question of the liability of a municipal corporation for an injury resulting from an exercise of its legislative powers was considered, and it was denied that any liability could arise so long as the corporation confined itself within the limits of its jurisdiction. That was a case of an incidental injury to property caused by the grading of a street. The plaintiff’s premises were in no way invaded, but they were rendered less valuable by the grading, and there was this peculiar *hardship in the case, that the injury was mainly or wholly owing to the fact that the plaintiff’s dwelling had been erected with reference to a grade previously established and now changed. In the subsequent case of City of Detroit v. Beckman, 34 Mich., 125, the same doctrine was reaffirmed. That was a case of injury by being overturned in a street in consequence of what was claimed to be an insufficient covering of a sewer at a point where two streets crossed each other. It was counted upon as a case of negligence, but the negligence consisted only in this, that the city had failed to provide for covering the sewer at the crossing of a street for such a width as a proper regard for the safety of people passing along the street would require. If this case is found to be within the principle of the cases referred to, the ruling below must be sustained, and that, we think, is the only question we have occasion to discuss.
The cases that bear upon the precise point now involved are numerous. In Proprietors of Locks, etc., v. Lowell, 7 Gray, 223, it was held that a city was liable in an action of tort for draining water through sewers and drains into a canal owned by a private corpoi’ation, thereby causing injury to the canai; the conclusion being planted on the right of the corporation “to an unmolested enjoyment of the property.” In Franklin v. Fisk, 13 Allen, 211, it is said by Chapman, J.: “When highways are established they are located by the' public authorities
An action like the one at bar was sustained in Nevins v. Peoria, 41 Ill., 502; Aurora v. Gillett, 56 Ill., 132; Aurora v. Reed, 57 Ill., 30; Alton v. Hope, 68 Ill., 167; Jacksonville v. Lambert, 62 Ill., 519. The same is true of Pettigrew v. Evansville, 25 Wis., 223, where Dixon, Oh. J., is at some pains to distinguish the case from one of merely incidental injuries. The case of Vincennes v. Richards, 23 Ind., 381, appears by the report to have turned on this distinction; and see Cotes v. Davenport, 9 Iowa, 227. The doctrine of the foregoing cases is approved by Judge Dillon in his treatise on municipal corporations, Vol. 2, p. 799, note, where several Upper Canada cases are cited in its support. We refer also to Merrifield v. Worcester, 110 Mass., 216, where the same distinction is somewhat considered by Wells, J. In St. Peter v. Denison, 58 N. Y., 416, the action was against a contractor with the state for the enlargement of the canal, who in blasting rock had caused an injury to the plaintiff while the latter was employed on other premises in the vicinity. The defendant claimed the same exemption which the state would have had under the same circumstances. Conceding that he might stand in the
It is very manifest from this reference to authorities, that they recognize in municipal corporations no exemption from responsibility where the injury an individual has received is a direct injury accomplished by a corporate act which is in the nature of a trespass upon him. The right of an individual to the occupation and enjoyment of his premises is exclusive, and the public authorities have no more liberty to trespass upon it than has a private individual. If the corporation send people with picks and spades to cut a street through it without first acquiring the right of way, it is liable for a tort; but it is no more liable under such circumstances than it is when it pours upon his land a flood of water by a public sewer so constructed that the flooding must be a necessary result. The one is no more unjustifiable, and no more an actionable wrong, than the other. Each is a trespass, and in each instance the city exceeds its lawful jurisdiction. A municipal charter never gives and never could give authority to appropriate the freehold of a citizen without compensation, whether it be done through an actual taking of it for streets or buildings, or by flooding it so as to interfere with the owner’s possession. His property right is appropriated in the one case as much as in the other.— Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co., 13 Wall., 166; Arimond v. Green Bay, etc., Co., 31 Wis., 316; Eaton v. B. C. & M. R. R. Co., 51 N. H., 504.
A like excess of jurisdiction appears when in the exercise of its ¡lowers a municipal corporation creates a nuisance to the injury of an individual. The doctrine of liability in such cases is familiar, and was acted upon in Pennoyer v. Saginaw, 8 Mich., 534.
The recent case of Rowe v. Portsmouth, decided by the
—See Am. Law Times and Rep., Yol. 3,p. 482.
*It follows that the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.