128 Ga. 501 | Ga. | 1907
1. This is an action for damages resulting from an alleged nuisance which it is averred caused members of the plaintiff’s family to be ill. The nuisance was a small stagnant pond of water near the plaintiff’s residence, which was produced by the construction of the defendant’s road-bed across a low place, being a natural drain for adjacent territory, without placing under the road-bed a proper culvert for the purpose of allowing the water to escape. The evidence is undisputed that the water did accumulate and that a culvert was necessary in order to avoid such accumulation. The culvert was constructed, but not on a level with the lowest place of the drain. It was constructed higher up. The defendant contended that such was the best method of making a permanent drain; this upon the idea that the entire place was naturally low and in time of rain the water could not pass through, and consequently trash would accumulate and obstruct the culvert, whereas by raising the level of the culvert, while the water would pond for a while, soil from the adjacent territory would soon wash in and fill the low place on the near side of the -embankment to a level with the culvert, thus raising the bed of the stream higher than the opposite side of the embank
2. If, under circumstances enumerated in the first division of this opinion, a railroad company-intentionally obstructs a natural drain so that the water naturally flowing through the same accumulates and forms a stagnant pond and thereby becomes a nuisance, it will be no defense to an action for damages resulting therefrom that the road-bed was constructed upon scientific principles, which, though producing a temporary nuisance, would eventually destroy the nuisance. One can not, to the injury of another, rightfully create or maintain a nuisance, either temporary or permanent. If he wrongfully does so, he must pay the injured person such damages as naturally 'flow from the wrong. Sav. F. & W. Ry. Co. v. Parish, 117 Ga. 893; W. & A. R. Co. v. Cox, 93 Ga. 561; 21 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 688. Under the facts-of this case it was no cause requiring the grant of a new trial that the judge charged the jury: “It [the railroad] is not bound to guard against every possible contingency which may arise and which may result to the injury of the property or the health of others, but it is bound to so construct and keep and maintain its
Judgment affirmed.