30 Ind. App. 447 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1903
The first paragraph of appellee’s complaint, a demurrer to which for want of sufficient facts was overruled, contained averments that the appellant was, and for more than ten years had been, a municipal corporation under the general laws of this State; that the appellee was, at the time of the grievances complained of and for more than six years prior thereto, the owner in fee simple of certain real estate, described by metes and bounds, in said city; that the appellant caused to be made a surface drain, commencing at the northern limits of the city, and running thence in a southeasterly direction along, upon, and across the city, following a depression and natural watercourse of the neighborhood, and terminating at a
It appears in the briefs of counsel that the drain in question was constructed of brick, and, extending at varying depths beneath the surface along the course of a natural depression, ended in that depression a short distance above the appellee’s real estate. This depression was not the
It sufficiently appears that the city collected into an artificial drain water which would naturally have flowed in directions other than toward the appellee’s premises, and, instead of constructing the drain and carrying the accumulated water therein beyond the real estate of the appellee, caused the drain to terminate near to and above the appellee’s real estate, whereby the surface-water, thus increased in quantity, and flowing with greater force, and the filth and noxious substances accumulated in its course, were cast against and upon appellee’s real estate to his damage. The cáse, under the averments of the pleading, was one for the wrongful use made of the drain, in thereby collecting and diverting surface-water which naturally would have flowed away from, the appellee’s land, and causing it to flow in volume so increased, and with force so augmented, and to be cast, with offensive substances borne by it, against and upon his land..
There is and can be no question as to the right of a city to construct such a drain for carrying off the surface-water, and thereby benefiting its streets and protecting the health of the inhabitants of the city; but a municipal corporation can not, without liability, divert surface-water from its natural course by such an artificial channel, and thereby cause it to flow in a body upon adjacent property; and, having so collected such surface-water into a body, it became the duty of the city to make reasonable provision, as by the continuation of the drain beyond the appellee’s premises, whereby the collected water would have passed on its course toward the natural stream without such injury to the appel
This subject has been so thoroughly discussed in these and many other cases, and the matter is so well settled, that there is no sufficient occasion here for further remark upon the complaint. Other matters discussed by counsel are not sufficiently presented by the record.
Judgment affirmed.