Gilluly v. City of Madison

63 Wis. 518 | Wis. | 1885

Cole, O. J.

The learned counsel for the defendant insists that the court below erred in refusing to give an instruction, asked on the part of the city, to the effect that it was not liable for any error or want of judgment upon which its system of drainage was devised, nor for any defect or want of efficiency in the plan of drainage adopted. The answer to this objection is that the plaintiff does not *522rest tbe liability of tbe city for tbe damage to bis property on any snob ground, as we understand tbe case. He does not claim that tbe system or plan of drainage adopted by tbe city was unsuitable or defective, and that be was thereby injured. It may well be the law, as claimed by counsel, that a municipal corporation is not liable for any error or want of judgment upon which its system of drainage of surface water may be devised, nor for any defect in tbe plan which it adopts. Tbe common council must, from necessity, exercise its judgment and discretion in such matters, and should be at liberty to adopt what seems to be the best plan to accomplish tbe end, having regard to tbe means at tbe disposal of tbe city for the purpose of sewerage. “ When tbe iiijury is occasioned by tb& plan of tbe improvement, as distinguished from tbe mode of carrying tbe plan into execution, there is not ordinarily, if ever, any liability.” 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. § 1051. But, as we have said, tbe plaintiff does not rest bis right of action on tbe ground that tbe plan of drainage adopted by the city was defective and injured bis property; hence, though tbe instruction was correct as an abstract proposition, it was not applicable to tbe case. Consequently it was not error to refuse it.

Tbe next error assigned is tbe refusal of tbe court to give portions of tbe third and fourth instructions, and tbe entire sixth instruction. Tbe proposition embraced in these instructions not given, is, in substance, that if plaintiff’s premises were below tbe grade of tbe street, and tbe injury complained of was in any way occasioned by reason thereof, or if a greater quantity of surface water was thrown upon tbe premises than they would have received if raised to tbe proper grade, after tbe city bad established it and constructed its system of drains and sewers, then tbe city was not bable for such damage, it being the duty of tbe plaintiff to raise bis premises to the proper grade. In support of tbe correctness of these instructions counsel quotes a por*523tion of the section of Judge Dillon’s •work which we have above cited from. In that section the learned author has stated what he deems the result of the authorities on the question of inunicipal liability for injuries caused by surface water, in four general propositions. "We have already given his second proposition. It may be well, in order to have the views of this eminent jurist on this question, to quote the rest of the section, which is as follows:

Third. Rut in the case last supposed there will be a liability, if the direct effect of the work, particularly if it be a sewer or drain, is to collect an increased body of water, and to precipitate it onto the adjoining private property to its injury. But since surface water is a common enemy which the lot-owner may fight by raising his lot to grade, or in any other proper manner, and since the municipality has the undoubted right to bring its streets to grade, and has as much power to fight surface,water in its streets as the adjoining private owner, it is not ordinarily, if ever, hable for simply failing to provide culverts or gutters adequate to keep surface water off from adjoining lots below grade, particularly if the injury is one which would not have occurred had the lots been filled so as to be on a level with the street. The cases are not in harmony on the point last presented, but the above is believed by the author to be the correct doctrine. Fourth. There is a municipal liability where the property of private persons is flooded, either directly or by water being set back, when this is the result of the negligent execution of the plan adopted for the construction of gutters, drains, culverts, or sewers, or of the negligent failure to keep the same in repair and free from obstruction; and this, whether the lots are below the grade of the streets or not. The cases support this proposition with great unanimity.”

Row, when the facts of this case are considered, one can hardly fail to see that according to this statement of *524the law the city is liable for the injury complained of; for the gravamen of the complaint is^ — and there was evidence tending to prove it — the negligent and unskilful construction of the gutter along the plaintiff’s premises, especially the failure of the, city to keep the same clear from obstructions so that the surface water would have a free passage-way through it. This is apparent from the allegations that the gutter nearest the plaintiff’s premises, for a distance of eighty-five feet, was merely a blind ditch, the sides of which are laid up with quarry stone, without plaster or cement to keep the water from percolating through it; that on account of the insufficient size of that portion of the gutter, and the rough and uneven material of which it is made, the short angle it makes where it intersects the north line of University avenue, and that the bed of the gutter is ascending instead of descending, the gutter is incapable of readily receiving and discharging the large quantity of water which is accumulated in time of rains. And it is further alleged that the city, by its careless and negligent management of the gutter, has permitted weeds and other obstructions to grow in and obstruct the passage-way of water since its construction, by reason whereof large quantities of water, during the wet season of 1882, and every preceding year since the gutter was built, have escaped from this blind ditch into plaintiff’s cellar, basement, and garden. This, we think, states an actionable wrong. It is true, the evidence shows that the premises were below grade. And the real meaning of the instructions refused is, if the premises were below the established grade, and the injury was in any way occasioned by reason thereof, there could be no recovery, because it was the duty of the plaintiff to raise his lot to the proper grade. This was, in effect, ignoring all negligence on the part of the city in the construction of the gutter, and in failing to keep it free from obstructions.

*525In this case an increased quantity of surface water, collected from other sources than the adjoining street, was made to flow in the gutter to and around the plaintiff’s premises. It seems to us it was the duty of the city to exercise reasonable care in the construction of the gutter in the first instance; also not to suffer it to get out of repair, or fill up with weeds and other matter, so as to cause the water to overflow into the plaintiff’s cellar and basement, to his injury, whether the premises were below grade or not. The case is distinguishable from Allen v. Chippewa Falls, 52 Wis. 430; Waters v. Bay View, 61 Wis. 642; and Heth v. Fond du Lac, ante, p. 228, where there was no allegation or proof of any negligence or unskilfulness on the part of the municipality, either in grading its streets, or in constructing gutters th'ereon for carrying off surface water.

At first glance, the case of Waters v. Bay View might seem to affirm the immunity of the defendant city;, but there is a very marked distinction between that case and this. There the village, in grading Potter avenue, allowed an old gutter to remain, or constructed a new one under the street to carry off the surface water which sometimes accumulated on the adjoining lands of one Link, and the lands of the plaintiff and others beyond the lands of Link, and which usually passed off through a ravine down to and through this culvert. The culvert became obstructed, and thereby caused the surface water to flow back upon the lands of the plaintiff. The court decided that the village was not bound to make provisions for carrying off the surface water; that it had the same right over its streets as any other owner, and might hinder the flow of surface water upon the street from the lands of other proprietors; and when it made provision by a sewer or drain to carry off the surface water of adjoining lands, it might discontinue or abandon the sewer, if such owners were left in no worse *526condition than they would have been if such sewer or drain bad never been made.

In tbis case it appears that surface water was drawn from lands on tbe opposite side of tbe street by means of a cul-ver!, also was collected from other sources than tbe street,— surface water which otherwise would not have run to tbe plaintiff’s lot,— and was carried along tbe side of tbe street in a gutter or blind ditch around bis premises. If there was negligence in tbe construction of tbis gutter or blind ditch, or there was a negligent failiwe to keep tbe same in repair, free from obstructions, and tbe plaintiff was thereby injured, be is entitled to redress, though bis lot is below grade. We recall no case in tbis court in conflict with tbis view, nor do we think any of tbe cases cited by counsel lay down a different rule. It seems to us it would be stretching, tbe doctrine of immunity from liability to an unreasonable extent, to bold there was no responsibility on tbe'part of the city in such a case. See Freburg v. Davenport, 63 Iowa, 119; Weis v. Madison, 75 Ind. 241, where will be found a very able discussion of tbe question of municipal liability for injuries caused by surface water.

Tbe fourth error assigned was tbe refusal of tbe court to instruct that it was tbe duty of tbe plaintiff to keep tbe •gutter in front of bis premises in proper condition, free from all obstructions, and if be failed to do tbis there could be no recovery. On tbis point tbe court charged that, in order for tbe plaintiff to recover in tbe action, tbe jury must find “ that in grading Gilman street to and at its intersection with University avenue, surface water, such as is liable to accumulate in heavy rain-storms, during ordinary seasons, was drawn from lands on tbe opposite side of tbe street from plaintiff’s lot by means of a culvert across said street, and that it, and surface water from other sources than tbe street, which otherwise would not have run to the *527plaintiff’s lot, was taken along the side of said street in a gutter to and around the plaintiff’s lot, and that by reason of a culvert or blind ditch in front of his lot, defective in its construction, or which was suffered to get out of repair, or fill up, such surface water overflowed or ran from such culvert upon and into the plaintiff’s lot, or into his basement, to the injury of its use, and the use of his lot and dwelling.” This charge was excepted to.

It is evident that in this charge the right of recovery is made to depend upon certain essential facts. Unless the jury found that these facts existed, they were told the city was not liable. "We may assume, then, that the facts specified in the charge were established to the satisfaction of the jury. This being the case, is not the city responsible for the injuries to plaintiff’s property occasioned by the negligent construction of the gutter or blind ditch in front of his lot, especially because it suffered it to get out of repair? It is said there was no defect in the construction of the gutter, and that the city is not liable for its being obstructed, because there is an ordinance in force which, among other things, requires the owner of a lot abutting on a street to keep all gutters opposite his premises in good repair and free from obstructions. The learned circuit court said it was doubtful whether this ordinance, in relation to keeping gutters clear and in repair, applied tp a covered ditch like the one in question. "We are quite clear that it does not. The ordinance should be construed as relating only to the ordinary open gutters along the streets. This gutter, or rather blind ditch, was covered by the city with plank for about seventy feet, and upon the plank was thrown a small depth of earth. The ditch below the stringers which supported the plank was from ten to fifteen inches deep. It was doubtless a wise precaution for the city to cover this ditch so as to prevent teams and persons from *528getting into it and being injured. Such blind culverts should be under the control of the city, so that they may be kept thoroughly clean from rubbish and mud, and also to insure proper covering. They are especially dangerous places unless well covered or guarded, and the liability of the city for personal injuries would be greatly increased if lot-owners were allowed to interfere with them. The plaintiff was of the opinion that he had no right to uncover the ditch and clear it out, and we think this view was correct. There was'evidence which tended, to prove that the ditch was “pretty well filled u¡3 with mud and dirt.” This certainly tended to show actionable negligence dn the part of the city.

Another error assigned is the refusal of the court to give an instruction to the effect that if any right of action ever existed in favor of the plaintiff, by reason of the change of grade of the street, it accrued more than six years prior to the commencement of this action, and was therefore barred. There was surely no error in refusing to give this instruction. What the plaintiff complained of was in the nature of a private nuisance to his property. Whenever there was any considerable rain-fall the surface water which was brought to this blind ditch escaped from it into his basement. This was the wrong or injury done to his premises, not the change of the grade of the street.

We think there is nothing else in the exceptions which requires special notice. There being no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.

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