166 Ind. 14 | Ind. | 1905
—Action for damages for negligently causing the overflow of the plaintiff’s lot.
Proceeding under the act of 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 164, now repealed, the provisions here involved being in substance reenacted in Acts 1901, p. 449, §§1, 2, §§6899, 6900 Burns 1901) fifty freehold voters of Center township, Porter county, in which township the city of Valparaiso, of 6,000 inhabitants, is located, on April 24, 1899, filed with the board of county commissioners their petition for the improvement, by grading and graveling, of a certain highway in said township which extended into the corporate limits of said city, and which extension within the city was over Campbell street, a north and south unimproved street, to Haas street, a distance of more than eighty rods. Whereupon the commissioners appointed a surveyor and reviewers, who proceeded under the law to view, survey, establish grade, and make a profile of details, determine the quality and depth of gravel, and cost of improvement, and on May 16, 1899, filed with the commissioners their report, as required by the statute. For the grade of the street the surveyor and viewers adopted the grade established by the city council in December, 1895, by ordinance. The common council of appellant city having given its consent to said improvement and ordered it to be made, as provided by section two of said act of 1899, the county commissioners ordered an election, which resulted in a majority vote of the township, including the city, being cast in favor of the proposed improvement, as exhibited by the plans and profile made by the surveyor and viewers. A contract was let by the commissioners, and the improve
The complaint, alleging, in substance, the foregoing facts, is in two paragraphs. The first counts upon the negligence of appellant in failing to provide a means of escape for the large body of surface-water collected and cast upon the plaintiff’s premises by the improvement of Campbell street. The second, upon negligence in maintaining a system of drainage from Campbell and Pearl streets whereby no way of escape was provided for the large body of storm water that was collected, carried and discharged upon the plaintiff’s premises. The case went to trial on the general denial and the six-year statute of limitation. There was a trial by jury, and verdict and judgment for appellee.
There are divers assignments arising upon the pleadings and motion for a new trial, but appellant’s counsel advises us that “the law governing municipalities in dealing with surface-water in the .grading of its streets is the question to be decided in this case.”
(2). We now come to the real question for decision: Is appellant liable for damages for so improving Campbell street as to cause surface-water to be diverted from its natural and usual flowage, to collect in large quantity in side ditches and to be discharged in a body upon an abutter’s premises, where it was not accustomed or natural for it to go, without providing any way for its escape therefrom ?
There is evidence to the effect that, before Campbell street was improved, the principal part of the storm water complained of, falling on from eight to ten acres lying east of Campbell street, meandered along natural depressions to the south and west, and crossed Campbell street through two culverts, about thirty and forty rods, respectively,
It is plain that we can not say that the verdict would have been the same if the court had permitted appellant to prove that the rain which injured the appellee was of a character for which the city was not liable. For this error the cause must be reversed. The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to grant appellant a new trial.
Mandate Modified.