66 Pa. Super. 538 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1917
Opinion by
The present action is the outcome of a series of actions wherein adjoining landowners contend over the flow of surface water. '
, In Tussey v. Clark, 45 Pa. Superior Ct. 433, where some of the facts on which this case rests were under consideration, this court, in speaking of the order of the court below, which followed the grant of a preliminary injunction, said: “The order referred to was clearly a mandatory order and issued without any sort of authority on the state of the record thén existing.” In that proceeding the present appellant as a supervisor was enjoined from constructing a ditch along the public road. The appellant, disregarding the restraining order, continued the work; an attachment was asked for and at the conclusion of the hearing the court below made the order referred to. In it J. Luden Henry was appointed to repair the road so that the water would flow “in the way it was wont to flow prior to the filing of the bill.” Henry complied with the order by placing a large pipe underneath the road and then endeavored, in the same proceeding, to collect the cost thereof from this appellant. In disposing of that question Judge' Henderson, in Tussey v. Clark, supra, made the statement referred to. This court did not pass on the court’s authority to make such an order in a proper case, nor did it express any opinion, as to the protection that would be afforded, the court’s officer acting under and executing the order, nor did it preclude the appellees in any subsequent ac
The present case was carefully tried by able counsel. It continued over two days, considerable testimony was taken, the jury had the advantage of a view of the premises, and were carefully instructed by the trial judge on each question raised. Forty-eight assignments of error are presented for our consideration. They need not be discussed in detail. The learned trial judge submitted the case to the jury to determine whether Henry, in complying with the order of the court, wrongfully diverted more water than would naturally flow towards plaintiff’s easement, the right of way, or if the pipe was placed in a natural water course.
When the appellant’s predecessor in title was granted this easement of right of way from his farm to the public road, he had the right, and it was his duty, to take such care of it as would carry the waters flowing naturally across the way to the ditch or ravine below. For this purpose he could have entered on defendant Tussey’s ground and made a ditch that would have prevented further trouble. It appeared in the evidence that on one of the former suits this right was expressly conceded. There was evidence that the pipe was placed in “the lowest part of the ravine or road” where the accumulations from the upper side of the road would and did naturally flow. The lane or right of way for a short distance paralleled the public road and at the point where the pipe was' placed under the road it was but a few feet away. It was an easy matter for the appellant at a small cost to have taken care of this water by a culvert similar to the one on the road or by breakers along his right of way. Where the officers turn water from a road, in a suitable place and along a grade or course over which it naturally flows, the township is not liable for the consequences of such an exercise of discretion, nor would any one acting for them under an
The pipe was placed under the road in the latter part of February, and the damage was done in April or May following. During this time the supervisors were in control of the highway. ' It is in evidence that the acts of Henry were ratified and approved by them. If Henry proceeded without authority, and was not protected as a court officer, because the court was without jurisdiction to make an order, these acts of the township officers would fix on the township liability. It was after Henry had departed, and before the damage was done, that the township authorities knew of Henry’s acts. If Henry had violated his instructions by not causing the water to flow “where it was wont to flow,” or as a trespasser he committed the acts complained of, the township then would be liable therefor. If his work on the public highway rendered the adjoining properties unsafe or unlawfully damaged them,- it was the duty of the township authorities, knowing of it, to take proper measures to protect them. The township could not tolerate unlawful excavations or ditches in its highways if the water culvert was such, and claim exemption from liability for injuries caused merely because the work had been done by another. Thus it has been held that a person opening a street under an invalid permit was a trespasser and if his work made the street unsafe for travel, it was the duty of the borough authorities, having notice, to take proper measures to protect the public against it. If they did not, and injuries resulted, they were liable: Boyle v. Hazleton Boro., 171 Pa. 167; Beloud v. Sayre, 56 Pa. Superior Ct. 215. If damage had immediately arisen, his liability, acting as a trespasser, would have preceded the liability of the supervisors. They were required to have notice. It is unquestionably the law, where one negligently interferes with a highway, he is at once liable to a party injured from the moment the injury takes place. But taking the case in its strongest aspect for the appellant, his right of action, under the
The court below, however, permitted the jury to find when the ratification and approval took place. The evidence showed that it was in 1910 or 1911 and the court held that if it was before the action against the township was instituted, the appellant could not recover. The court could have gone further and held that the act of the township officers, with full knowledge of the pipe’s existence, the manner of its construction and its relation to. adjoining lands since the February before the injury occurred, amounted to an adoption of Henry’s acts.
The supervisors are empowered to cut open, maintain and repair drains and ditches through adjoining lands as they deem necessary to carry the water from the road. They aré also empowered to build culverts, ditches,, and breakers in highways. The supervisors of the township have control of the public roads; they are required to keep the roads free from all impediments to easy and convenient travel: Hall v. Rine, 60 Pa. Superior Ct. 401-405. “Where there are no streams and no defined water courses, but the flow is over the surface of a field or fields, a large discretion is vested in supervisors as to the most practical and efficient method of disposing of water, to the end that the roadbed may be protected
We are not able to say what bearing the equity case between the appellant and the plank road company in 1902 had in the present controversy.. The record of that case, though offered in evidence, is not printed in the paper books. If it influenced or controlled the subject-matter in controversy it was certainly admissible. If the present township took over or became charged with the care of an abandoned turnpike, then, inasmuch as Henry was acting in the capacity of a supervisor (or if he was acting as a trespasser, his acts being adopted by the township) this record would certainly be competent evidence to show the disposition of the same question here raised in that action. The assignments of error which complain of the admission of this and other records are not self-sustaining. Considering them on their merits, the cross-examination on this record, and the admission of this and other records in evidence, was proper to a clear understanding of the ease.
The charge of the court was free from any error prejudicial to the plaintiff. The case was well tried, and the judgment is affirmed.