86 N.Y.S. 562 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The recovery is for damages to plaintiff’s candied fruits, which were in the cellar of premises occupied by him at Fb. 143 Chambers street in the city of Few York, caused by -flooding from a break in a T or branch connecting a twelve-foot main in the middle of Chambers street with a hydrant in front of neighboring premises. On the 14th day of Fovember, 1901, the defendant Gerken applied for
'At about eleven o’clock in the evening of December 29, 1901, the pipe broke in the vicinity of the stopcock, the break extending 'out towards the main. There had been a leak in the pipé in that vicinity for many days. The soil, was sandy, and the water percolating through the sand and following the pipe, dripped into the excavation softening the soil and gradually undermining the sides of the excavation upon which the timbers supporting the hydrant rested, and at or shortly before this complete ■ break in the pipe these supports settled, leaving the- entire weight of the hydrant to be sustained by the pipe itself. The water poured from the- break in large volumes with great force, making a roaring noise, flooding ■ the excavation and entering plaintiff’s cellar as already stated.
It clearly appears, we think, that the hydrant was not properly supported, and that it broke owing to the weight of the hydrant and that part of the pipe suspended over the excavation; and it is difficult to understand upon what theory the jury omitted to find negligence on the part of the contractor. That question, however, is not before us. As between the city and the contractor it was undoubtedly his duty under the permit to properly protect the hydrant and supply pipe, but the rule of non-liability for the act of an independent contractor I think has no application to this case. The city of course would not be liable for any negligent act of the contractor or his employees; but that does not necessarily relieve it from liability for its failure to take precautions within a reasonable time after notice to prevent damage from the escape of water even though such escape was caused by an act of the contractor. Moreover, were it not for the leak in the pipe which ultimately undermined the support to the hydrant, it may well be that the pipe would not have broken.
It does not follow from the fact that the contractor was negligent that the city may not be compelled to respond in damages. The plaintiff is entitled to recover against as many as he shows were joint tort feasors. The pipe that broke was a cast iron pipe and it had been laid about sixty years. The stopcock and manhole had been constructed about ten or twelve years and new pipe was substituted for part of the old lateral pipe at that .time but not at the point where the break occurred. On the twenty-third day of December the defendant Reilly addressed a letter to the department of water supply which was duly mailed, properly addressed, on that day as follows: “ Gentlemen: — The hydrant on. the northwest corner of
The city in establishing and conducting a fire department, as in establishing and conducting a police department, is ■ performing a governmental function. It is not liable in damages for the failure of the police department or members of the force to suppress crime, except under special statutory provisions such as the law relating to damages caused by riots; nor is it liable for unlawful arrests or assaults even though committed with batons or revolvers furnished by it for the use of patrolmen or officers of the force; nor is it liable for the failure of the fire department to promptly respond to an alarm of fire or for its negligence in extinguishing a fire or for the failure of the city to supply the department with suitable and sufficient apparatus or to furnish a proper supply of water and maintain the same in a proper condition for use. ' These are all governmental functions and in performing them the city represents the State. If the city maintained a separate water system for the fire department, and the break occurred in such a pipe, it may be that it could not be chargeable with negligence concerning the construction or maintenance of the same; but that is not this case and need not be decided. Here the fire hydrants are connected by lateral pipes with the mains which are used for supplying the city and its inhabitants with water and from which the city receives a revenue. It is clear, I think, that for negligence in not repairing a water main proper, or a service
It follows that the. judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Patterson and Hatch, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., and Ingraham, J., dissented.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.