110 N.Y.S. 992 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1908
The pleadings are oral. The complaint is “ Sewer overflow.” The answer is “ General denial, demand bill of particulars.” The defendant’s counsel states that “ a written bill of particulars was served and filed,” but it is not annexed to the record. The evidence shows that the plaintiff sued the defendant to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of water entering her cellar at 204 Delancey street from a break in a water pipe, which pipe was under the control of the defendant. The jury found for plaintiff in the sum of $200. Defendant moved for a. new trial, which motion was denied; and defendant appeals from the judgment entered upon the verdict and from the order denying the motion for a new trial. The plaintiff's son states that, at five o’clock in the afternoon of December 26, 1906, the cellar had three feet of water in it, and that the water was still rising; that he telephoned to the “ City Department,” and that about seven o’clock the city’s repair gang came; that between five and seven the water still flowed; that the repair gang worked a couple of hours and the flow stopped; that the repair gang then proceeded to pump the water out of the cellar, and that at eleven o’clock the repair gang left. There was another break in the same pipe, and resulting overflow about one year previous, according to the testimony of plaintiff’s son, who claims that he watched the city repair gang while they were fixing the pipe in both instances, and that he also heard one of the repair gang state that the pipe which broke on December 26, 1906, was the same pipe that broke a year previous, in December, 1905, or January, 1906.
Present: Gildersleeve, Dayton and Gerard, JJ„
Judgment affirmed, with costs.