Beach v. Scranton

25 Pa. Super. 430 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1904

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The city of Scranton, in the year 1891, in the lawful exercise of authority conferred upon it by statute caused the actual work of grading Garfield avenue to be done upon the ground ■ in front of plaintiff’s property. The lot of the plaintiff was below grade and she objected to the filling of the street in such a manner that the slope of the fill would extend over her *432property line, and to avoid such a fill it would have been necessary, in order to grade the street of its full width, to build a wall in front of the property. The plan of the improvement was, while the work was in progress, duly modified by the city authorities, so as to provide for grading the street in front of plaintiff’s property for a part only of its width. The work was executed in accordance with the plan as modified. The city accepted and paid the contractor for the work. Viewers were duly appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction to assess the damages and benefits resulting from the grading of the street; the plaintiff appeared before those viewers, presented her claim and was awarded damages which were paid by the city.

An action of trespass was brought by the plaintiff against the city in 1896, the statement in which alleged that her property had been injured by casting upon it water which would not naturally have found its way there, resulting from three causes: («) The grading of Garfield avenue, (5) negligence in constructing gutters and drains on the side of said street and (e) negligence in failing to maintain said gutters and keep them free from rubbish. The case by agreement of the parties was tried before a referee under the provisions of the act of 1869. The referee found that the plaintiff’s property had been injured by having water cast upon it to the flow of which it would not under natural conditions have been subject.

He made detailed findings as to the physical conditions which caused this additional flow of water upon the plaintiff’s land, but every one of these conditions was the inevitable result of the grading of Garfield avenue, as it was done upon the ground in 1891. The referee did not find, nor would the evidence have warranted a finding, that the city had after the grading in 1891 done anything upon the ground which could possibly have injured the property of the plaintiff. There was no finding that there had been any negligence in doing the work under the plan which the city finally adopted, for grading the street. The findings of fact by the learned referee establish beyond all question, that the injury for which the plaintiff here demands damages was the direct, immediate and unavoidable result of the execution of the plan under which the city completed the grading of the street. This was an injury *433for which the plaintiff was entitled to recover, and which she must be presumed to have recovered, in the proceeding before the viewers; it was included in the award of damages which she there obtained : Cooper v. Scranton City, 21 Pa. Superior Ct. 17; Pusey v. Allegheny, 98 Pa. 522 ; Righter v. Philadelphia, 161 Pa. 73; Rodgers v. Philadelphia, 181 Pa. 243.

The referee did not find, nor did the evidence establish that the city had failed to properly maintain all the drains and trenches which it had made upon the line of the street. The city had not failed to maintain in proper condition all the public works resulting from the execution of the plan under which it graded Garfield avenue. The burden was upon the plaintiff, in this proceeding, to show that there had been negligence in the performance of the work called for by the plan, or a failure upon the part of the city to maintain the work after it was done, and having failed to do so she was not entitled to recover. The facts found by the referee did not warrant the conclusion of law at which he arrived, and the court below was clearly right in entering judgment in favor of the defendant : Thornton v. Insurance Company, 71 Pa. 234.

The judgment is affirmed.

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