115 Ala. 181 | Ala. | 1896
The plaintiff, Shahan, instituted this action to recover damages sustained in consequence of an overflow of water into his store-house in Attalla, in which he was engaged in merchandising. The overflow was caused by rainfall the 15th of February, 1893,
The defendant pleaded the general issue and special pleas four, five, six, eight, nine and ten. The plaintiff demurred to the special pleas, and the ruling of the court overruling the demurrer is assigned as error. The fourth, fifth and sixth pleas were intended to set up a prescriptive right, in bar of the action, acquired by adverse user of ten years. A right by adverse user does not begin to accrue, until there is an adverse user. The adverse claim of a right and its exercise uninterruptedly and without objection, for a period of ten years raises the presumption that the right was rightfully acquired, and bars redress for its rightful exercise. A plea, therefore, which merely avers that defendant constructed its embankments and culverts more than ten years prior to the injury, and has maintained them in the same condition ever since, without more is not an answer to a complaint claiming damages for an injury resulting from an overflow of water from rainfall caused by the embankments and defective culverts, which obstructed its natural flow. The plea should go farther and show that like effects resulted by reason of the embankments and culverts, to-wit, the overflow of water to the same extent had occurred at intervals during the ten years, of which the plaintiff made no complaint, but acquisced therein. The fourth plea avers “a throwing back of the water as complained of in plaintiff’s complaint.” Although not clear, it may be that this plea is sufficient. The fifth and sixth pleas are faulty, and the demurrer should have been
The demurrer to the ninth and tenth pleas was general. We would not be understood as holding that these pleas presented a valid answer to the complaint, but our rulings are, that the statute requires that the demurrer shall distinctly state or specify in what the objection or defect consists. — Code of 1886, § 2690, and authorities.
Issue being joined upon the pleas, the case was tried by the court without a jury. The appellee, contends, that this being true, the judgment of the court for the defendant being general must be affirmed, if the plea of the general issue or any good plea upon which issue was properly joined was sustained by the evidence.
It is evident from the proceedings of the trial and from the opinion of the trial judge which is before us, that the case was tried upon its merits under the plea of the general issue, and without any reference to the special pleas of the defendant. Under these circumstances, if the judgment was authorized by the facts under the plea of the general issue, the judgment must be referred to this plea, and be affirmed, notwithstanding the error in overruling the demurrer to the fifth and sixth pleas.—Morion v. Bradley, 30 Ala. 681; Raney v. Raney, 80 Ala. 157 ; Foster v. Johnson, 70 Ala. 249. We will examine the evidence as it is shown in the abstract. Plaintiff’s store-house was on lot five, north from defendant’s embankment, fronting towards 3d street and between second and third avenue. The rear end of the store abutted on defendant’s right of way, some fifty feet from the embankment, and was located about four hundred feet south from defendant’s culvert. Precision as to distances is not material. The embankment was constructed not later than 1873, and the culvert not later than 1881. The natural flow of the water was from north-west to-, wards defendant’s culvert, and the weight of the evidence shows that if undisturbed, it would pass through the culvert and southward, north of plaintiff’s store and without overflowing it. That plaintiff’s store was in part submerged with rain-water and his goods damaged on the night of 15th February, 1893, is not controverted. The evidence shows that the opening of defendant’s culvert was four feel by four feet; furnishing a carrying capacity of sixteen square feet. The evidence also
This brings us to the coiicTusuai of defendant’s other ground of defense. The evidence shows that about four hundred feet from defendant’s embankment on the south side, there are two other railroad embankments, the first that of the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad, and the second that of the Anniston & Cincinnati Railroad, that the culverts under these embankments are much higher than the culvert of defendant, and are too small and insufficient to furnish outlet for the water and sand, which pass through the culvert of defendant, and in consequence the land between the defendant’s embankment and these two embankments, over which defendant has no control, has been filled and raised, until it is two feet higher than the bottom of defendant’s culvert. The effect of this, it is contended, is to cause the water and sand to accumulate and fill up the drain between the culvert of defendant and the culverts under the other embankments, so that it became impossible in this condition to keep ■ the defendant’s culvert at all times open. The Tenn. & Coosa Railroad embankment and that of defendant come together, according to the map in evidence, about six hundred feet south of a line running between the culverts of the two roads. How much' of this entire triangle formed by the two embankments and a line running between the culverts has been raised or whether the defendant has permitted the sand and water to accumulate on its own right of way does not satisfactorily appear from the evidence. As the land is lower between these embankments by eighteen inches or two feet than on the north side of defendant’s embankment, where the plaintiff’s store is situated, we are unable to see why defendant could not have provided an escape for the water over its own right of way, at least to the ravine between the hotel and depot. The plaintiff having introduced evidence which made out a prima facie case, the burden
There was no error in permitting the defendant on cross-examination to prove that the spur track was built at plaintiff’s request, and if it be shown that there would have been no overflow, but for the spur track, constructed for the convenience of the plaintiff and at his request, he would not be entitled to recover.—Mayor of Troy v. Coleman, 58 Ala. 570. If, however, the overflow-resulted from the obstruction caused by the little bridge placed by defendant over its own ditch, which ran between plaintiff’s store and the embankment of the defendant, we are of the opinion the defendant would be held guilty of proximate negligence whether the water came from the culvert alongside defendant’s embankment, or across from the pond. If the embankment obstructed the natural flow of the water and caused the overflow of the store, the defendant would be liable, although other causes may have also contributed to the result..
Under all the circumstances, it seems to us the ends of justice would be better promoted by remanding the cause than by rendering a final judgment here.
Reversed and remanded.