This is an action of tort to recover for property damage caused by the negligent maintenance of the defendant’s sewer. The negligence alleged consisted in permitting the sewer to become defective or “clogged up.” At the conclusion of the evidence the judge allowed the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and the plaintiff excepted.
There was evidence that the plaintiff occupied as a tenant and used for restaurant purposes the first floor and basement of a building numbered 35 John Street in Lowell. The building adjoined an alleyway called Pollard Avenue which appears to have been a private way and to have led from John Street to a dead end. There was an eight inch sewer under Pollard Avenue which connected with a fifteen inch sewer in John Street, both sewers forming a part of the sewerage system of the city. There was no drain from the restaurant premises into either the Pollard Avenue or the John Street sewer. At the upper end of Pollard Avenue was a catch basin for surface water which was not installed by the city. The sewer fine in the alleyway was constructed by the city in 1911 and from that time was maintained by the city. The sewer department did not check the entire sewer system periodically. On six or seven occasions between 1935 and 1951 the proprietor of the restaurant complained to the department that the sewer in the alleyway was backing up and upon these occasions the department sent crews to the John Street sewer in front of 35 John Street. They “would open up the sewer by removing the manhole cover from the sewer in John Street and sticking poles through the connecting drain running up the alleyway into the sewer facility located in the alleyway and . . . on some occasions they would take a hose and flush out the drain.” On April 3, 1951, water from the sewer facility in the alleyway entered the downstairs dining room of the restaurant and caused damage. The sewer department was *33 notified and its employees cleaned out the drain connecting the sewer in the alleyway with the sewer in John Street in front of the premises. Thereupon the flow of water stopped. At the time of this occurrence the water level in the sewer was substantially below the surface of the alleyway.
A municipality is not responsible for damages which accrue to individuals through any defect or inadequacy in the plan of its system of sewers but “is responsible for damages which accrue to individuals through negligence in the construction, maintenance or operation of its system of sewers.”
Pevear
v.
Lynn,
Exceptions overruled.
