20 Pa. Super. 609 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
This case and the case of John Shaughnessy and wife against the same defendants were tried together, and it is conceded that the facts which determine the liability of the city are the same
It appears that the rear yards of the houses in “ Friend Row ” were formed of cinders and ashes and extended to the edge of Sawmill run, being supported and protected from the stream by timber cribbing. Sixteen or eighteen years ago a dam was constructed on the run about forty or forty-five feet below the plaintiffs’ premises. There was evidence tending to show that the city adopted Sawmill run as an open sewer, and hence, as correctly stated by the learned trial judge, it became its duty to keep it open and remove accumulations of filth and rubbish : Blizzard v. Borough of Danville, 175 Pa. 479 ; Owens v. City of Lancaster, 182 Pa. 257. The dirt and refuse which were carried down the run gradually filled up the space above the dam so that some of the city sewers which emptied into the run at some distance above the Friend houses were choked, and an offensive stagnant pool was formed. About August 1, 1898, employees of the city, in order to prevent the obstruction of the sewers and the flow of the stream, cut a “ V ” shaped section about twelve feet wide at the top and about three feet deep out of the center of the dam, and dug a ditch of about the same depth through the center of the mud that had accumulated in the bed of the stream above. During the night of August 18, 1898, a very heavy rain caused the stream to rise very rapidly. On the following morning Mrs. Shauglmessy, with her babe in her arms and an older child by her side, was standing in her backyard, when the dam was suddenly washed away, together with the cribbing which supported the made ground upon which they were standing, and all were carried out into the stream: Her two children were drowned and she was injured.
Aside from the question arising out of the joinder of the defendants, the principal questions raised in the court below and
It is urged that binding instructions should have been given for the defendant because the direct and immediately producing cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries was an extraordinary flood, an act of God, for the consequence of which the city cannot be held responsible. The jury were instructed that ordinary care does not call upon one to protect against an extraordinary flood, but were also instructed that an extraordinary flood is not simply an unusual flood, not simply a flood that does not occur often, but it is a flood which an ordinarily prudent man in the exercise of reasonable judgment would not expect to occur at all, and that it was for them to determine whether the flood was of that character. As several witnesses testified that many times before the stream bad been higher than it was on August 19,1898, it would have been manifestly improper forthe court to charge that this was one of those extraordinary and unforeseeable occurrences against the consequences of which the city, in the exercise of ordinary care, could not be expected to provide. The question whether it was an extraordinary flood, or one which an ordinarily prudent man exercising reasonable judgment ought to have foreseen as likely to occur, was for the jury, and was submitted to them with clear and adequate instructions, of which no complaint is made. The verdict has established the fact that it was of the latter character.
It is urged, in the second place, that binding instructions should have been given for the defendant, because no causal-connection between the city’s act and the tearing out of the cribbing and the washing away of the made ground upon which Mrs. Shaughnessy and her children were standing, was shown ; in other words, that it was not shown that the effect of the flood was different from what it would have been if the “ V” shaped section had not been cut out of the dam. That
The remaining question for consideration arises out of the joinder of the defendants. In disposing of this question the learned judge below drew a distinction between a case of joining several persons as defendants who, according to the plaintiff’s statement, could not be jointly liable, as in Howard v.
The judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the city of Pittsburg is reversed and a venire facias de novo, as to said parties, awarded.