76 N.Y. 60 | NY | 1879
The complaint does not state a cause of action. It alleges that plaintiff owned a lot, in New York city, on One Hundred and Thirtieth street, about 700 feet westerly from Eleventh avenue; that the defendants caused the grade of the avenue to be raised twenty feet above the surface of the adjoining lands; that they failed and neglected to provide any means of carrying off the rain water which fell upon the avenue, or to prevent such water from draining upon the adjoining lands; that, in the construction of works of a similar character, it is proper and usual to build embankments *62 to prevent rain water from flowing over the sides of the avenue, and also to build receiving basins or sewers to carry the same off, all of which defendants failed and neglected to build; that, by reason of such neglects and failures, the rain water flowed off from the avenue upon the lot of the plaintiff, and did him great damage.
There is no allegation that defendants, by this work upon the avenue, diverted any stream of water upon plaintiff's lot, or that they collected surface water into a channel and thus threw it upon such lot, or that they caused any more water to flow upon the lot than would have flowed there if the avenue had not been raised. The substance of the complaint is that the defendants did not protect plaintiff's lot, by sewers or embankments, from the rain water which fell upon the avenue, and flowed therefrom. That the defendants did not owe the plaintiff such protection is too well settled in this State to be questioned or to require further discussion. (Wilson v. The Mayor, 1 Denio, 595; Mills v.City of Brooklyn,
The cause of action alleged is not like that found in the case of Byrnes v. City of Cohoes (
This complaint might, therefore, have been properly dismissed, upon defendant's motion, at the opening of the trial, on the ground that it did not allege a cause of action.
But the proofs were substantially as defective as the complaint. They showed that the avenue was raised ten feet. There was no evidence showing where the surface water flowed before the grading of the avenue, or that any more flowed upon plaintiff's lot than before. One might guess that more did flow there, but it was incumbent upon plaintiff to prove it by satisfactory evidence. It was not shown that the surface water from a large area, as in the cases above cited, was collected into a channel and thrown upon the plaintiff's lot. The natural flow of the surface water seems to have been towards this lot, from at least two directions; and what the condition of the lot would have been, but for the raising of the avenue, cannot be known from the case.
The defendant had, at least, as much right to fill up and raise this avenue as a private owner of a city lot has to fill up and improve his lot; and there can be no question that such an owner may fill up his lot, and build upon it; and the surface water of adjoining lots may thus be prevented from flowing upon it, or the surface water may be thrown from it upon adjoining lots, and flow upon them in a different way and in larger quantities than before; and yet to liability would arise. If it were otherwise, it would be quite difficult to improve city lots, and build up a city. Each owner may improve his lot, and protect it from surface water. He may not collect such water into a channel, and throw it upon his neighbor's lot. But he is not bound, for his neighbor's protection, to collect the surface water which falls upon his lot, and lead it into a sewer. (Vanderwiele v. Taylor,
There are no facts, in this case, which made it the imperative duty of the defendant to drain the rain water, which fell upon the avenue, into the sewer which existed in One Hundred and Thirtieth street. It is settled that a city may *64 exercise its discretion, subject to no review or question in any court, whether, at any particular place, it will build a sewer; and what waters it will conduct into an existing sewer, and what drains it will connect therewith, must usually, for the same reason, also be within its discretion. (Dillon on Mun. Cor., § 799.)
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.