114 N.Y.S. 66 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
These two actions were for damages against the city, one for flooding the plaintiff’s cellar on October 9tli, 1903, and the other on August 10th, 1904, and were tried together. The prayer for damages in each was for $500, and the amount allowed in one was $346.25 and in the other $369.75. How the plaintiff was allowed to prevail passes credulity. If everything or anything had to be believed in court simply because there is no witness to contradict it, the administration of justice would be a pitiable affair. The testimony of the plaintiff is that he was in the cork business in this cellar; he bought second hand corks of peddlers and sold them again ; it rained during the day, and the water was 1-|- feet deep on the sidewalk and overflowed into the cellar ; it was 5 feet deep in the cellar; he had four men working there ; a cask of oxalic acid was destroyed ; how the water got into the cask is not shown ; two cork-cutting machines, worth $150 apiece, were destroyed; he paid $10 for repairs to them and then sold them for $3 for junk; how they were or could be destroyed by the water does not appear ; it was all out the second day ; 12 sets of cork knives were destroyed ; they were “ rusted and spoiled ” ; he “ made presents of them to good friends ”; a writing desk was ruined, total loss; likewise a stove, total loss; how, appears in no case; 25 to 30 sieves to drain water from corks ruined; 100 gross of Rhine wine corks worth 65 cents a gross, injured, and sold for 8 cents a gross; 500 whiskey corks so much injured as to be a total loss ; 300 gross of amber corks worth 20 cents a gross, reduced
When the law of the case is looked into, the judgments are still more extraordinary. The evidence is that there was a downpour of rain which flooded the street. There is no evidence that the city turned the water of other localities upon this locality, through the gutters, or through sewers, and that the sewers became choked thereby, and belched, and that the collected waters of other localities were thus cast into the plaintiff’s place. For such affirmative acts of negligence the city would be liable, but for the natural flowing of the water of that locality along the street it would not be liable (Smith v. Mayor, 66 N. Y. 295; Lynch v. Mayor, 76 id, 60; Seifert v. City of Brooklyn, 101 id. 136). The city should not be made the victim of such exaggerated and groundless actions as this.
The judgments should be reversed.
Woodward, Jenks, Hooker and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgments.of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered costs to abide the event.