80 Minn. 287 | Minn. | 1900
This action was brought by plaintiff against defendant city to recover damages to her life estate in a certain lot, alleged to have been caused by the city’s negligence when grading the street, whereby a large quantity of surface water had been unnecessarily and unreasonably collected, and turned upon her premises in destructive currents, to her damage. It is claimed by counsel for the defendant that the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict, but we are not obliged to express any opinion upon this point, for the order must be reversed because of error in the charge. At the plaintiff’s request the court gave three separate and distinct requests to charge, as follows:
First. “While a city may make all needful and necessary arrangements for the disposition of surface water involved in the grading of its street, it must do so with due regard to the rights and interests of others. It has no right to collect surface water at a point where it would not naturally go, but for its enterprise, and turn the same in destructive currents upon the adjoining land. If it do so, it will be liable to a person whose property is injured thereby for the damages he may sustain.”
Second. “In grading its streets, the city has a right to control the course of the surface water. It has a right to dam up and obstruct the same, and to change the direction of its flow. It may direct the same. But in so doing it must act with prudence, and a*289 reasonable regard for the property rights of others. It has no right to needlessly or unnecessarily change the course of surface water, to the damage of others’ property. If surface water can be disposed of equally well without detriment to others’ property, it is the plain duty of the city to so dispose of it; and it has no right to turn such water upon the property of others, when it can equally well be disposed of in its original channel, or in some other mode, without damage to others.” This request was then qualified thus: “That is, gentlemen, when it can be done practically and at a reasonable expense. Water can be taken almost anywhere. You can almost make it run up hill. But it would not be the duty of this city to expend ten thousand dollars in taking water through a certain place, when, in the judgment of the city council, at the expenditure of one thousand dollars they could equally well provide for it.”
Third. “If the jury find from the evidence that the defendant might reasonably have constructed a culvert through its roadbed on Second street, on the line of the old channel, for the surface water near Balsam street, and thereby conveyed the water in question through its natural and usual channel from its street and right of way, without injury to any other landowner, and that it neglected to do so, but that it unnecessarily and unreasonably drained the water upon the plaintiff’s property, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.”
And at the defendant’s request the court charged that
“The failure to build a sewer underneath North Second street, between Balsam and Spruce streets, to take care of and drain off water that may have accumulated west of Second street at that point, is not negligence on the part of the city.”
In the case of O’Brien v. City of St. Paul, 25 Minn. 331, the law bearing on the duty of municipal corporations as to accumulated surface waters was very clearly stated in the following language (page 336):
“From the complaint there does not appear- any necessity, in grading the avenue, to collect the water at the point indicated, nor any difficulty in conducting it off without injury to private property, if it was desirable to so grade the avenue as to accumulate the water there. Having accumulated the water there, it was the duty of the city to take care of it — certainly, if reasonably practicable — and prevent it injuring others.”
It was there clearly stated as the law that, having accumulated water, it was the duty of the city to take care of it, if reasonably
We are also of the opinion that there was direct conflict between the third request, as formulated by the plaintiff and given by the court, and the ninth request submitted by the defendant, and also given as the law in the case, which may have misled the jury.
For the error in the first mentioned of these special requests, the order refusing a new trial must be, and hereby is, reversed, and .a new trial granted.