130 Tenn. 261 | Tenn. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in. error was indicted for obstructing a certain public road or street in the town of Clinton, a municipal corporation, was found guilty, and fined $50, and the obstruction ordered to be removed in pursuance of the requirements of the statute (Shannon’s Code, sec. 6871). The case has been brought
While there was some conflict in the proof, the preponderance of the evidence is to the effect that in 1887 and 1888 a certain trestle was constructed by the Walden Ridge Railway, the predecessor of plaintiff in error, over what was then known as the Jacksboro road in the town of Clinton. At the time of its construction, this trestle was of sufficient height over the street to permit free travel and use of the said road. The said crossing was in the town of Clinton, but at the time the trestle was built, Clinton was not incorporated. Later the town of Clinton was incorporated, just when it does not appear from this record. In 1903 the first charter of this town was abolished and it was reincorporated under chapter 92 of the Acts of 1875, and chapter 133 of the Acts of 1903.
The preponderance of the testimony is that the level of this trestle has not been changed since it was first built by the Walden Ridge Railway Company in 1888. After the town of Clinton was incorporated, however, that municipality, by its agents, filled in the Jacksboro road or street, so as to raise its level, at the point where it is crossed by the trestle, between two and two and one-half feet. The result is that the trestle is not now high enough above the road to permit of the passage under it of loads of hay, fodder,
To a number of propositions contained in the brief for the State, we fully agree.
Under its charter, the town of Clinton has full control of its streets and railroad crossings over the streets. The municipality can alter the grade of its streets, and there can be no doubt under our cases but that it has the power to require railroad companies maintaining overhead crossings to reconstruct said crossings to conform to any change made in the level of the streets thereunder. Dyer County v. Railroad, 87 Tenn., 712, 11 S. W., 943; Chattanooga v. Railroad, 128 Tenn., 399, 161 S. W., 1000.
Moreover, the town of Clinton alone has control over its streets aiid crossings within the corporate limits, and neither the county court nor any other authority can interfere with the municipality in the exercise of this control. Shannon’s Code, sec. 1679; State v. Mayor, etc., of Loudon, 3 Head, 263; De Tavernier v. Hunt, 6 Heisk., 599.
If, however, the municipality permits its streets to get so out of repair or obstructed as to become a public nuisance, the said municipality and its officers are liable to indictment. State v. Barksdale, Mayor, 5 Humph., 154; Chattanooga v. State, 5 Sneed, 578; State
So while it mnst be conceded that the municipality has fall power over its streets and can change the grades thereof, and likewise has fall power to regálate the maimer in which railroads shall cross these streets, and can require crossings to he altered and reconstructed, nevertheless none of these considerations are determinative here.
Although the town of Clinton might have required the Southern Railway Company - to change the level of this crossing over Jaeksboro road or street, it has not seen proper to attempt any such thing. The municipality has filled up the street under the trestle, hut so far as this record shows, has been content that the trestle remain as it was before the level of the road was changed. The railway company has done nothing whatever to its trestle, and it was without power to interfere with the action of the municipality in raising the level of this road.
Under these circumstances, we are of opinion that the railway company is not liable to indictment for obstructing the public highway. We think the obstruction was caused by the act of the town of Clinton and the town of Clinton is liable to indictment if any one is.
Ordinarily one is not civilly liable for a nuisance caused or promoted by others over whom he has no control; nor is one bound to go to expense or litigation to abate such a nuisance.
Where a turnpike company built a drain into which an owner of land through which it flows, without the knowledge or consent of the company, turned foul matter, causing a nuisance and damage to another upon whose premises the drainage was cast, under these circumstances the landowner contributing the foul matter to the drain was held to he alone liable for the resulting damage. Magee v. Penn., etc., R. Co., 13 Pa. Super. Ct., 187.
Likewise it was held that where a railroad company had constructed a ditch along its track through which polluted water flowed into a pond on adjacent premises, depositing garbage and filth on said premises, and creating a nuisance, the railroad company was not liable to the owner of the premises for resulting damages where said pend was the natural outlet of the water originally flowing through the ditch, and the increase of flow after the building of the railroad and ditch and the pollution of the water was caused by drains and ditches and embankments on the lands of others over which the company had no control. Brimberry v. Savannah, etc., R. Co., 78 Ga., 641, 3 S. E., 274.
The same principle would apply to a criminal prosecution of a nuisance. One who so uses his property as that it becomes a nuisance to the public is subject to indictment and conviction. If his use thereof injures an individual, he is subject to an action for damages. In neither case is a defendant responsible for a nuisance not proximately resulting from some act or omission of his own with respect to his property. •
ín a South Carolina case, the defendant was indicted for a nuisance occasioned by an overflow from the head of a millpond which he maintained. The proof showed defendant’s dam had been erected in the stream for many years without causing an overflow or damage to the neighborhood. Landowners undertook to deepen and alter the channel of the stream above the millpond for drainage purposes, and there was evidence that, as a result of this work, large quantities of sand and
“While it is true that the defendant would be liable if his obstruction of the creek, by his pond and dam, was in itself the cause of the injuries complained of, yet, if the consequences are to be attributed to the acts of others, so affecting his property that it becomes a public nuisance, it would not appear consistent with justice or propriety that he should be held to responsibility.
“The mere erection of the mill and dam on his own land was no nuisance; and if results, though injurious, yet not prosimate and direct, followed, because set in motion by the acts of others, either in cutting the ditch, which by the accumulation of sand choked the channel and raised it higher than the adjacent banks, thus forcing the water over the edges of the ditch or banks, and collecting it in pools or holes, or from the increased cultivation in the neighborhood, it would seem that the consequences are to be referred to an agency operating on the property of the defendant, for which he should not be liable, because not employed by him. They were not prosimate or direct, in the legal sense in which those terms are understood. He must be held accountable for the unlawful effects which naturally or directly proceeded from his acts.” State v. Rankin, 3 S. C., 438, 16 Am. Rep., 737.
The evidence preponderates against the verdict and judgment below, and the case will be reversed.'