This is an action to compel the defendant to make good the amount which the plaintiff has paid upon a judgment in favor of one Elizabeth Chagnon against it for an accident upon a highway. The accident was a fall due to an accumulation of ice, which the plaintiff alleges to have been caused by the discharge of water from a spout on a building belonging to the defendant. At the trial in the Superior Court the judge ruled that the defendant had a right to discharge the water as it did, and that the plaintiff and defendant were joint tortfeasors, and on these grounds directed a verdict for the defendant and reported the case. If either ruling was right, or if Elizabeth Chagnon could not have maintained an action against the present defendant, and if, in that case, as matter of law, her inability would prevent the city from recovering, judgment is to be entered on the verdict; otherwise judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff.
In our opinion neither of the foregoing rulings was warranted upon the evidence. In support of the former it is urged, in the first place, that it did not appear that the place of the accident was a highway. But there was evidence of its having been used as a highway for the last fifty years, and of its having been repaired by the city, and it properly would have been found to be a highway by prescription if no record had been produced. Commonwealth v. Coupe,
At the time of the lay out the defendant had not discharged water through this pipe long enough to acquire a right by prescription. After the lay out it could not prescribe for a right to discharge the water in such a way as to create a public nuisance of this sort. New Salem v. Eagle Mill Co.
It appears by the evidence that the water originally was carried across the sidewalk by an iron pipe, which seems to have been a surface pipe, or, at least, likely to cause passers to stumble; that about 1877 the city took up this pipe and substituted an open gutter, and that later it levelled the sidewalk. Formerly there was no sewer in the street. Now there is one. Thus it will be seen, in addition to what has been said already, that the modes of discharge have been different, — perhaps too different to add the time of one mode to that of another, — and that probably the original mode was a nuisance for a different reason from that which made or might be found to make the latest mode one. We may add that we do not perceive an assent to the nuisance on the part of the city. As against the defendant the city had a perfect right to make a level sidewalk, although by so doing it made precautions on the defendant’s part necessary in order to prevent a nuisance.
Then as to the second ruling reported. It is well settled that the city is not precluded from recovering against the active cause of the injury by being in a certain sense a joint tortfeasor. If its negligence consists merely in the failure to discover and remedy a defect in a highway created by a third person, although it is liable to a traveller who is injured, it may recover over. Lowell v. Boston & Lowell Railroad,
There remains the question whether the plaintiff is prevented from recovering on the ground that Elizabeth Chagnon could not have recovered. There seems to be no doubt that the defendant had charge of the spout, which was on the outside of a block of tenement houses. It would be a strong thing to say that Mrs. Chagnon gave up any of her rights as a traveller when on the highway because as tenant she took the premises as she found them. But however that may be, and if that relation would have precluded her from recovering against her landlord, we are of opinion that the city has a right independent of subrogation. As we understand the decisions, ■ it has a special interest arising out of its statutory liability which the law will protect. Andover v. Sutton,
Judgment for the plaintiff.
