32 Pa. Super. 68 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1906
Opinion by
No exceptions seem to have been taken to the rulings of the court complained of in the second, fourth, seventh, eighth and twenty-second assignments of error. They are, therefore, not properly before us and may be disregarded in the consideration of the case. Inasmuch, however, as the same questions are raised by the other assignments of error, the case, as presented by the appellant, will be fully considered.
The first, third, fifth, sixth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth assignments of error raise practically the same question.
'■ The statement sets forth the ownership, in the plaintiffs, of a large tract of land divided into building lots, through which a small natural stream of water runs, which found an outlet under Lawrence street by virtue of an open channel, over which a bridge was carried, which freely allowed the passage of the water which ordinarity came down the course of the stream; that, in 1902, the borough of Middletown carelessly and negligently, without any legal right, and in total disregard of the rights of the plaintiff, took away said bridge and filled ■up said street and put in two small iron pipes for the purpose of carrying the water of said stream under said street; that the
1. The plaintiffs, in presenting their case, offered, and, under the ruling of the court admitting their offers, proved general damages, such as the washing away of the retaining wall of the open stream above the bridge, the removal of which is complained of, the loss of rent of houses damaged by the backing of the water, and various other items not specifically set forth in the statement.
“ The statement in an action for negligence must set forth with particularity the defendant’s acts of which the negligence is predicated, and the cause and nature of the injury; mere general averments of negligence are not sufficient: ” 16 P. & L. Dig. of Dec. 27,222.
The acts of negligence here are very clearly set forth. They are the substitution of two small iron pipes in place of a bridge which allowed free passage of the water from above which ordinarily came down the course of said stream; the erection of “ a wooden grating or crib above the entrance to said two small
This is a clear and concise statement of the acts of negligence complained of. Is the plaintiff debarred, by setting forth in his statement certain specific items of damage, from showing other items which are the natural result of the negligent acts complained of ? This seems to be the main point under this branch of the case raised by the defendant.
In view of the result of the trial, what was said in Baylor v. Stevens, 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 365, in which the same question was raised, would seem to be applicable: “ It (the statement) is certainly concise, if not as specific as it might be. The trial developed the fact that the defendant was prepared to meet all the allegations of the plaintiff. The statement evidently, therefore, furnished him with the information, which it was necessary for him to have, of the ground upon which the plaintiff sought to recover, in order to prepare for and properly present his defense, and this is one of the principal functions of a statement.”
■ If the defendant regarded the statement as insufficient, he could have demurred or he could have applied to.the court for a rule to show cause why a more specific statement should not have been filed. He joined issue and went to trial on the statement as filed and the trial clearly showed that he was prepared to meet the testimony of the plaintiff as to the- damages resulting from the negligence complained of.
Under this branch of the case, it may be well to allude to the several motions made at different times to continue the case on the ground of surprise. The rule of court under which this motion was made is not given. In some of our courts a continuance on the plea of surprise is regarded as equivalent to a matter of right, when the rules governing such a continuance are complied with, namely, an affidavit properly made, setting •forth the grounds upon which the surprise is predicated.
2. It is alleged that there was no evidence that the borough had substituted the pipes in question for the bridge which was removed. As to this, we think the court stated the case more strongly against the plaintiff than the facts warranted. The clerk of the council testified from recollection that “ The supervisor reported among other things that he done (sic) was the fixing of or the placing of the sewer pipes across •Lawrence street, later on. Q. You think the supervisor reported the placing of the pipes ? A. Yes, sir.” It is true that this -witness and the plaintiffs themselves fix a different date for the placing of the pipes, but the question was as to whether or not the borough did it. However this may be, it appears that notice was given to the council by one of the plaintiffs of the insufficiency of the pipes to drain the water coming down from above and that there was general acquiescence in the complaint, and an effort was subsequently made to remedy the difficulty. -At all events, as pointed out by the court in the charge to the jury, “ A municipality cannot allow an obstruction of that kind to exist for any considerable time and then say that it is exempt from liability, or that it had no notice, or that it had no knowledge. It is bound, after a reasonable time, to know, and if it is a defect to remedy it, so that whether it appears that the borough placed the pipes at Lawrence street or whether, being placed there and insufficient to carry off the water, they were bound to know that they were there, and if they did not remove them, they are liable, if injury was done to the plaintiffs, in the same manner and in the same way as though they had placed them there.”
But it is strenuously argued by the appellant that, even if the borough placed the pipes there and they were insufficient to carry the water which came down from above, it was an error of judgment and that they are not liable therefor, under the well-known rule lately referred to in Siegfried v. Bethle
3. As already intimated, there is no exception to the ruling of the court as to the admission of evidence in relation to the character of the March flood of 1904, as contained in the eighth assignment of error. The ninth and tenth assignments relate to the instructions of the court in regard to the results of this flood as follows: “ It is also said that an unusually high flood last March was the cause of the water backing from the river up the channel, up the creek, where this water was accumulated and flowed against and through that tunnel across Lawrence street and up the stream, and that its swirling then and its running down with some degree of turbulence, as the waters in the river subsided, was the cause; and you will ascertain whether there is any evidence to show that that is so. There is some, and you will consider whether it is as it is claimed. That is said to have been an unusually high flood, higher than the river has been accustomed to be. That is what is called an act of God; and if that was the sole agency which at that time was the cause of the injury and damage to the land of the plaintiffs, then no man is responsible, for a visitation sent us of that kind, if it was a large one — -and I assume that it was an unusually high flood — works injury to nobody. If, however, there was that flood and the waters backed up underneath the tunnel or underneath the causeway at Lawrence street, and aided in doing the damage, but the waters coming from above
This is not in any sense a departure from the law as laid down in Siegfried v. Bethlehem Borough, 27 Pa. Superior Ct. 456, in which it is said: “ And even if, with an extraordinary flood, there is concurring negligence, the party chargeable with it will be relieved from liability, if the flood is so overwhelming in character that it would of itself have produced the injury complained of, independently of such negligence: B. & O. R. R. Co. v. School District, 96 Pa. 65; Helbling v. Cemetery Co., 201 Pa. 171.” The language of the court, that “If man contributes toward the injury, man alone is responsible,” is in no manner contrary to the statement that, “ If the flood is so overwhelming in character that it would of itself have produced the injury complained of, independently of such negligence,” man is not responsible. It is simply another way of stating the same rule.
It was said in B. & O. R. R. Co. v. School District, 96 Pa. 65 : “We apprehend that the concurring negligence which, when combined with the act of God, produces the injury, must bé such as is in itself a real producing cause of the injury and not a merely fanciful or speculative or microscopic negligence which may not have been in the least degree the cause of the injury. In other words, if the act of God in this particular case was of such an overwhelming and destructive character as by its own force, and independently of the particular negligence allowed or shown, produced the injury, there would be no liability, though there were some negligence in the maintenance of the particular structure. .To create liability it must have required the combined effect of the act of God and the concurring negligence to produce the injury.”
The remarks of the trial judge on this phase of the case were in exact accord with this statement of the law.
Viewing the case as a whole, from any of the points of view