269 F. 559 | 4th Cir. | 1920
The business district of the city of Blue-field, W. Va., is located in a narrow valley, running in an easterly and westerly direction, through which extends the right of way of plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant. Bluefield is a divisional point of the railway company, where it maintains extensive yards and repair shops. To provide an adequate supply of water for its operations at that point, defendant about ten years ago constructed a pipe line some 4 miles in length through which water is pumped from the Blueston'e river. This pipe line is 16 inches in diameter, made of cast iron, of the bell and spigot type, with oakum and lead joints; it is laid on defendant’s lands alongside its railway tracks, and approximately 3% feet below the surface.
The Amicon Eruit Company, herein called plaintiff, is the owner of a .building, erected in 1909, upon a lot abutting defendant’s right of way, which it uses in its .business of a wholesale dealer in fruits and vegetables, and in which its stock of goods is carried. It is a substantial structure, built for the uses to which it is devoted, and having in the basement a specially prepared storage room. Immediately in front, and extending along the fronts of a number of wholesale houses, is a side track'for handling the carload traffic shipped .to and by the plaintiff and other dealers. Beyond this siding are the main line tracks of the railway.
The suit is brought to recover damages, alleged to aggregate $20,-000, which plaintiff claims to have suffered by reason of water in large quantities getting into its basement from leaks in defendant’s pipe line. This injury is said to have begun in 1910, soon after the pipe line was constructed, and to have happened frequently thereafter, resulting in great damage to plaintiff’s stock of fruits and preventing the use of its expensive storage room. In its bill of particulars for the five years preceding the commencement of the action—prior injuries being barred by the statute of limitations—the items amount
“The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence in this case that water escaped from the pipe line of the defendant and flowed into the basement of the plaintiff, during the five years next preceding the time of the institution of this suit, and that it was in such quantity as to damage the plaintiff, and did cause it damage, then you will find for the plaintiff such damages as you believe from the evidence in this case it is entitled to.”
The rejected requests of defendant, putting its contention in various forms which need not be reproduced, all embody the proposition that it cannot be held liable if the pipe line was properly constructed and proper diligence used in its inspection, maintenance, and repair, and that this was the case will for present purposes be assumed. The issue is thus clearly defined.
At the outset it may be observed, as is understood to be conceded, that the defendant quoad this pipe line has the status and liability of a private individual. Moreover, the injuries complained of were not caused by a mere accident, which could not reasonably have been foreseen; they were rather the result of a continuing condition, or at least an incident of frequent occurrence for a series of years, of which the defendant was all along fully aware. Granted that the pipe line was built in the best manner and maintained at all times with due care, so that defendant was not negligent in those respects; nevertheless the fact is, as the jury were warranted in finding, that quite often it did leak, as defendant well knew, and to such an extent as to materially damage the plaintiff.
This being so, we are of opinion that defendant cannot escape liability by showing that its pipe line was well built and carefully maintained, and the rulings in question are therefore correct. The governing principal in such case is stated by contrast in Sutton v. Clark, 6 Taun. 28, quoted with approval in Transportation Co. v. Chicago, 99 U. S. 635, 644 (25 L. Ed. 336) as follows:
“This case * * * is totally unlike that of the individual who for his own benefit makes an improvement on his own land according to his best skill and diligence, not foreseeing it will produce injury to his neighbor; if he thereby, though unwittingly, injure his neighbor, he is liable.”
The case thus described seems precisely the- case here. Defendant built this pipe line on its own land and for its own benefit, acting thereby in a private capacity and without legislative authority. However skillfully the work was done and whatever the diligence since exercised, it must be held responsible, not perhaps for a purely accidental occurrence, but for those injuries to an adjoining owner which
The case of Jennings v. Davis, 187 Fed. 703, 109 C. C. A. 451, apparently relied on by defendant, is clearly distinguishable. That was the case of an accident, the blowing out of: a gasket from a pipe joint, claimed to have been caused by the negligence of defendant in respect of that particular appliance; and this court said:
“The record does not present the question discussed and decided in Rylands v. Fletcher, L. R. 3 H. L. 330, as modified by Nichols v. Marsland, L. R. 10 Exch. 255, because no' damage resulted from the fact that the oil escaped and ran upon the plaintiff’s premises. The action is not for damage sustained by the trespass, but for the injury which resulted from the ignition of the oil on the premises. * * * Liability is therefore dependent upon the existence of negligence, which may arise either by defective construction of the pipe and connections or failure to make a proper inspection.”
The distinction is manifest. We are not here dealing with an accident, an unexpected and unlikely happening, but. with the continuous or frequently recurring results of what may be called the normal operation of this pipe line, though properly constructed and carefully maintained. It is not a question of negligence, in the ordinary sense of that term. Defendant in effect says that it cannot keep its pipe line from leaking and therefore is not liable for the consequences. In our judgment the position is plainly untenable.
“The evidence justified the belief that the water came mainly from the tank, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover for all damages from that source; and if the jury could not separate and distinguish between the several amounts of the damage caused by the water from the tank and the surface water respectively, they should have been left at liberty to estimate as best they might, from the evidence, how much of the whole damage was occasioned by the water from the tank.”
“The defendants also insist that the injury might he remedied hy the plaintiff at small cost by digging a drain along the embankment. If this were true, he is not bound to do it. As the defendants caused the damage without authority, and for their own benefit, they should find the remedy at their own expense.”
Moreover, as the jury might have found from the testimony, the plaintiff was absolved from any duty to construct such a drain, or to otherwise safeguard its premises, by repeated promises of defendant that it would itself prevent further damage and also pay for that which had been inflicted. The contention cannot be sustained.
We have examined the other questions raised by defendant, but And none of sufficient merit to require discussion. The case appears to be a close one on the facts, but the record shows no error which calls for reversal.
Affirmed.