74 Pa. Super. 389 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1920
Opinion by
The negligence attributed to the defendant was the omission to clean out the ditches in a public highway known as Harrison road, as a consequence of which, water from the highway flowed onto the plaintiff’s premises, producing injury to two dwelling houses located near-by, and washing a gully in the lot. The road referred to is located on a steep hillside with a downward course in the vicinity of the plaintiff’s property, and immediately in front of the buildings is a shelf of shale rocks which breaks away abruptly into a ravine. The plaintiff’s houses are on the west side of the road; one of them a frame building at the edge of the road, the first floor being two or three feet below the level of the road. The other building constructed of brick is located about thirty-two feet west of the road and about eighteen feet below the road grade. About 700 feet northwardly of the plaintiff’s lot the road connects with a highway called Patterson street which is located on the same watershed, and some of the water flowing on Patterson street is discharged into Harrison road. Nearly all of the water flowing in Harrison road is carried in the ditch on the west side. About seventy feet up the road there is a breaker which diverts the water from the east to the west side, and a similar breaker near Patterson street. The hill on the east side of the street in the vicinity of the plaintiff’s premises is precipitous and the watershed narrow. The natural flow of rain water on the hillside is westwardly. There are no natural watercourses on the slope except that at the bottom of the ravine in the rear of the plaintiff’s lot. The ditch on
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted with direction to the court below to enter judgment for the defendant.