This suit was against the City of Milledgeville and a construction company for damage to personal property of the plaintiff in their warehouse, resulting from the inundation of the ground floor of the building by surface water from the streets.
1. “The officers in charge of the affairs of a municipal corporation may select places for the construction of a system of sewerage and drainage, and adopt a plan for such construction, without rendering the city liable in damages for injuries resulting from such selection and from the proper construction of the system.”
2. In the instant case the allegations of the petition fail to show any act of negligence done by the servants of the city or by its contractor in the construction of the system of drainage, but it affirmatively appears that the work was done in accordance with the plans and specifications adopted by the municipal authorities, and that the damage to the plaintiffs resulted from the fact that the plan itself was improper in that it did not provide for an opening in the perpendicular sewer to carry off the surface water falling in the street. In these circumstances there was no cause of action stated as against the city or the contractor on account of negligence, and the court should have sustained the demurrers to the second count of the petition.
3. “That which the law authorizes to be done, if done as the law authorizes it to be dime, can not be a nuisance.” Burrus v. Columbus, 105 Ga. 42 (31 S. E. 124); City Council of Augusta v. Lamar, 37 Ga. App. 418 (140 S. E. 763), and cases cited.
4. Since the court dismissed the third count of the petition on demurrer, and no exception is taken to that ruling, it is unnecessary to determine what’right of action, if any, may have accrued to the plaintiffs under the provision of the constitution of the State of Georgia that “private property shall not be taken, or damaged, for public purposes, without just and adequate compensation being first paid.”
Judgment reversed in both cases.