41 Neb. 737 | Neb. | 1894
This suit was brought by Christian H. Adams in the district court of Lancaster county against the Lincoln Street Railway Company for damages. As the petition is well drawn and concisely states the facts relied upon for a cause of action we quote it at length. It is as follows:
“The plaintiff, for cause of action against the said defendant, alleges that he is and was on and prior to the ■- day of April, 1891, the owner in fee-simple and in possession of lot A, in South Park addition to the city of Lincoln, in said county, and the lessee and in possession of lots thirty-two and thirty-three (32 and 33), in block four (4), in said South Park addition; that upon said lot A are the dwelling house of the plaintiff, where he and his family resided on said -day of April, 1891, and now reside, and his barn, well, and outhouses; that said lots 32 and 33 theu were and are used by plaintiff as a market garden; and the plaintiff alleges that the grade and track of the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad Company runs along the west side of said lots, and that one of the public
“And the plaintiff further alleges that the said defendant is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Nebraska; that on said-day of April, 1891, the said defendant began to lay its track upon and along, said Hill street from a public street of said city known as Tenth street, two blocks east of plaintiff’s said lots, across said railroad track and grade and beyond the same; that in laying said track the said defendant carelessly and negligently made a deep cut of the depth of three feet and upwards in said hill east of plaintiff’s said lots along said Hill street, and from the base of said Hill street west to said railroad track carelessly and negligently 'raised and graded up the middle of said Hill street to a level with said railroad track and grade and over two feet above the surface of said lot and built and laid their said track thereon, and carelessly and negligently omitted and failed to put culverts under their said track and grade and carelessly and negligently failed to provide for carrying off the
“And the plaintiff further alleges that on or about the first day of June, 1891, he had growing in his market garden in said lots 32 and 33 upwards of 3,000 cabbages and 5,000 egg plants, of the’ value of $800; that on or about said date there were heavy rains, and that by reason of the negligence of the defendant, as above set forth, all the surface water from said hill flowed in and upon said lots and deposited large quantities of waste and refuse matter thereon and there accumulated, stood, and remained for the space of two weeks and upwards, being unable to run off by reason of the negligence of the defendant in
The answer of the street railway company was, in substance, a general denial. Adams had a verdict and judgment, and the street railway company brings the case here for review.
Counsel for the street railway company insists that the grievances pleaded and proved against his client arose from its acts and efforts to protect its property from surface water, and that if Adams sustained any damages by reason thereof, the street railway company is not liable therefor. In other words, the contention of counsel is that the facts pleaded and proved against the street railway company bring it within the rule of the common law, that a proprietor, by dikes or erections on his own land, may fight surface water as a common enemy without regard to its accumulation or to directions such accumulated water may take or to damages it may do. (See the rule stated and the authorities collated in 24 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 917.) But we think that the pleadings and evidence in this case do' not bring it within the rule just stated. The petition in this case was framed upon the theory that the cut made by the street railway company in Hill street gathered together the surface waters which would otherwise have flowed off in many streams and in other directions and discharged them in a body on the property of Adams. The evidence supports the allegations of the petition and the findings of the jury in this respect. This case then falls within the rule that a proprietor may not collect surface waters on his estate into a ditch or drain and discharge them in a volume on the land of his neighbor. (Hogenson v. St. Paul, M. &
There are a number of errors assigned as to. the admission and rejection of testimony and to the giving and refusing of instructions by the trial court. It would sub-serve no useful purpose to discuss here these assignments, as no one of them can be sustained. The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error strenuously insists that the verdict of the jury is unsupported by sufficient evidence, and that,, in any event, the amount of damages awarded Adams by. the jury is excessive. The evidence is not of the most satisfactory or convincing character, but it is sufficient to' support the verdict. The judgment must be and is
Affirmed.