Opinion by
The plaintiff in this action of trespass filed a statement averring that the defendant borough had constructed and maintained, “across and under Main Street and thence along and under Valley Road, a sewer, for the purpose of carrying the water that falls upon and along the highways of the borough and collects therein; that said sеwer was constructed and is maintained in so negligent and unskillful a manner that the water which should flow through the same and away from plaintiff’s property is caused to back and flow into the cellar of the house thereof, rendering it damp and unhealthy,” and averring damage to the property as a consequence. The plaintiff at thе trial produced evidence tending to establish that his house situate on the west side of Main street was built upon lоw, flat land, that in order to drain the water from his cellar he had placed under the surface a four-inch piрe leading from the floor of the cellar to the open ditch or drain at the side of the public street; thаt in 1909 the borough had constructed the sewer in question and as a part of the detail of the plan for said sewеr had installed an inlet on the west side of Main street, at a point distant about 175 feet from the point at which plаintiff’s pipe entered the drain at the side of the street; this inlet was eighteen inches high and thirty-six inches wide and in it were insеrted three perpendicular iron rods one inch in diameter, thus dividing the thirty-six inches of width into four equal spaces, for the purpose of protecting the sewer against the entrance of material likely to clog it. The еvidence would have warranted a finding that, after the completion of the sewer according to the plans adopted by the borough, the inlet to the sewer on the west side of Main street, sometimes when there was an unusually heavy rainfall, failed to take the water as rapidly as it accumulated, and the open drain on thе west side of Main street would become full of water, which would then flow back through the four-inch pipe which plаintiff had installed and into his cellar. The court below entered a judgment of nonsuit which it
The plaintiff cannot in this action recover for such injuries to his property as were the direct and necessary consequence оf the construction of the sewer according to the plan adopted by the borough authorities; for such injuriеs he was confined to the remedy provided by the statute, a proceeding before viewers: Fyfe v. Turtle Creek Borough,
The judgment is affirmed.
