43 Minn. 476 | Minn. | 1890
From the findings of fact in this case, made after several questions had been submitted to and answered by a jury, it appears that plaintiff and defendant owned and occupied adjoining lots in the city of Minneapolis. The plaintiff’s dwelling-house stood 35 inches, and the defendant’s 27 inches, from the dividing line; and consequently the houses were only about 5 feet apart. On this line the plaintiff had built a high board fence. The defendant’s lot was from one to two feet higher than that of plaintiff, sloped towards it, and was lower near the centre of his own house, and near the -centre of plaintiff’s as well, than at either end. The roof upon defendant’s house was so constructed that a part of the waters falling thereon were gathered into gutters, and from thence, flowing into and through a conducting pipe, were discharged upon defendant's land in the open space between his house and the fence on the line, of about two feet in width. At and about the place where the waters were so discharged, the soil of plaintiff’s lot was sandy and pervious to water. The court also found that the waters so gathered into the conducting pipe, and discharged on defendant’s land in the space before mentioned, flowed through and under the fence on to plaintiff’s lot “in such large quantities as are likely to be injurious,” and drained under and through the foundation walls of her house, filling her cellar at times to the depth of three feet, rendering it useless, and the house damp and mouldy, to her damage in the sum previously fixed by the verdict of the jury, for which sum, and that defendant be restrained and prohibited from future acts of the same character, judgment was ordered in plaintiff’s favor.
The appeal is from a judgment entered in accordance with the findings and order; the assignments of error being, in effect, that the findings of fact did not warrant the conclusion of law, because it was not found that the defendant cast water upon the plaintiff’s premises in increased or injurious quantities. The appellant insists that the findings are incomplete and insufficient in this respect, citing a large number of cases from the reports of this state on the subject of surface waters, commencing with Lee v. City of Minneapolis, 22 Minn. 13, and ending with Jordan v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., 42 Minn. 172, (43 N. W. Rep. 849.) Some of these cases have a bearing upon
Judgment affirmed.