199 Mass. 568 | Mass. | 1908
This is an action of tort by the plaintiff, a traveller upon a public sidewalk, against the defendant, an abutting landowner, for collecting water from his roof and conducting it through a spout to his own walk, whence it flowed by natural slant to the public walk and froze, so that the plaintiff while walking with due care after dark on a December day slipped and was injured.
1. The refusal of the trial judge to rule that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover was correct. There was evidence that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. A landowner has a right to change the surface of his lot, or improve it by the construction of buildings or by other means, in any lawful manner, and if the natural course of surface water is thereby altered no liability is imposed on him. But he has no right to collect water into a definite channel by a spout or otherwise and pour it upon a public way. If he does this and through the operation of natu
2. There was evidence from which it was argued that there was a depression or gully in the sidewalk, into which the water from the defendant’s spout flowed and froze. Upon this aspect the defendant asked for rulings in substance that the plaintiff could not recover, if the water would have run off, but for the defect in the sidewalk, and that the defendant in maintaining his premises was not obliged to take into account the effect of this condition. This request was refused, and the jury instructed that if the defendant materially contributed to the cause of the defect, which occasioned the plaintiff’s injury, he would not be excused because some other cause also contributed, and that if the defendant’s conductor was a nuisance and water from it froze on the sidewalk, so as to be dangerous, the defendant would be liable, even if the sidewalk was otherwise dangerous. No error is here disclosed. The town and the defendant were not joint tortfeasors in producing the dangerous condition of the sidewalk, which resulted in the plaintiff’s injury, yet if each contributed an efficient causal factor, either may be liable. Mooney v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co. 185 Mass. 547. Lowell v. Glidden, 159 Mass. 317. Boston v. Coon, 175 Mass. 283. A landowner in turning water upon a public way is bound to take into account its actual condition, and determine at his peril
3. The defendant has argued in his brief that there was no evidence as to the length of time the defect in the sidewalk had existed, but that point does not appear to have been raised at the trial, and the portion of the charge dealing with it is not reported. It is now too late to raise the question. The defense was apparently directed to the point that water from the spouts did not flow over the sidewalk. If the defendant had in the exercise of ordinary prudence reasonable notice that his storm water, in conjunction with any other cause, produced a dangerous condition, he is responsible. Davis v. Rich, 180 Mass. 235.
4. There was admitted in evidence, subject to the defendant’s exception, a by-law of the town of Westfield that “No person shall permit water from the eaves or leader pipes of any building owned or cared for by him to be discharged upon the sidewalk— or make or permit any drain, sluice, gully or conduit upon his land to discharge water upon the sidewalk — ” It is contended that there was no evidence of a-violation of this by
5. The defendant, having offered to show that, since the ' accident to the plaintiff, there had been no change in any of t
Exceptions overruled.
The instruction here referred to, which was requested by the defendant and was refused by the judge, was as follows: “ 4. The by-laws of the town are in no event conclusive, if infringed by the defendant, on the question of liability, and are not to be considered as having any bearing on the case at all, unless the jury can find that the water discharged directly from the conductor on to the public walk.”