56 So. 43 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
When a municipal corporation, in the construction of embankments and culverts and digging ditches, etc., in the improvement of its streets, causes a large quantity of water to be diverted and to overflow a lot in destructive volume, it is liable in damages to the owner of such lot, whether the work was done negligently or not.—City of Eufaula v. Simmons, 86 Ala. 515, 6 South. 47; Arndt v. City of Cullman, 132 Ala. 540, 31 South. 478, 90 Am. St. Rep. 992. This proposition disposes of the grounds of the demurrer to the complaint based upon its failure to allege that there was negligence in the construction of the embankment and culverts to which the injury complained of was attributed.
A demurrer directed against a complaint as a whole cannot be sustained on a ground which refers only to a part of the complaint which claims special damages. The complaint stating- a cause of action for the injury to plaintiff’s lot resulting from water diverted and thrown back upon it by the embankment constructed by the defendant, a question as to the sufficiency of the averment of special damage to the plaintiff’s dwelling house and outhouses was not properly presented by the demurrer to the complaint as a whole.
It is insisted that the trial court was in error in admitting in evidence, over the objection of the defendant, the written application or claim for payment made by the plaintiff on the defendant before the institution of the suit. It is urged that the presentation of that in-
The motion to strike plea 1 and the ruling of the court on that motion are not shown by the bill of exceptions. That ruling, therefore, is not presented for review.'
A witness who has testified that he saw a stream of water on the occasion of a freshet, and saw water from it back up and overflow a certain lot, may be asked to state what caused the water to back up and overflow the property. It is a matter of common knowledge that water flows downward, and that when water from a stream backs up and stands on adjoining land, where this did not happen before a change had been made by the erection of a structure affecting the channel of the stream, it must be because of some obstruction in or insufficiency of the outlet. A question to an eyewitness, who was familiar with the local conditions before the change had been made, as to what caused the water to back up and stand on a certain lot, hardly can be said to call for his opinion or conclusion, but rather is a request that he state what, if any, obstruction he saw; and when, in answer to such a question, the witness states that the water was dammed up and thrown back by an embankment which had been built so that it spanned the stream, and that the culvert under it was not large enough to let off such a volume of water, he states, not a mere opinion or deduction, but a fact which came under his observation. Though some of the questions asked in this connection in form called for the
If the question asked the witness Stubblefield as to whether plaintiff’s lot would have been overflowed on the occasion inquired about if the stream had remained in its natural condition, unaffected by the embankment erected by the defendant, should be regarded as subject to the objection made to it, yet the defendant Avas not harmed by the overruling of that objection, as the answer to the question was favorable to its contention.
Affirmed.