Thе present action is one in which the plaintiff seeks to recover as for a continuing, abatable nuisance maintained by the City of Macon. It appears from the evidence that in 1925 the defendant, through expert engineers, redesigned and rebuilt the sewerage system serving the Poplar Strеet drainage area in the City of Macon; and it is not contended that as reconstructed at that time the system was inadequate. The gist of the complaint is that since then it has become inadequate to the extent that it now constitutes an actionable nuisance, and while being so maintаined' has damaged the plaintiff by reason of the fact that it could not properly dispose of a volume of water which was precipitated by a rainfall which in July, 1936, caused such a flooding that the accumulated water flowed into the premises of the plaintiff and damaged its merchandise in the amount sued for. It is contended that the plaintiff’s right to recover is independent of any negligence of the city; that the mere fact of a '“nuisance” gives it a right of action. While the motion for new trial contains the general grounds, in addition to several special grounds, it is appаrently conceded that except for alleged errors of the trial court in charging the jury in respect to negligence of the defendant being an element in the right to recover, and the admission of certain testimony over objection of the plaintiff, the verdict in favor of the defendant was authorized. The general grounds are not argued' or insisted on, and accordingly they must be treated as abandoned, the only issues being, as stated by counsel for the plaintiff: “1. Error in the charge of the trial court on'the doctrine of nuisance. 2. Errors in the admission of testimony.” These issues are rаised only in the special grounds of the motion .for new trial, and our investigation is narrowed accordingly.
It is undisputed that the City of Macon had the right under its charter to provide for or reconstruct its sewerage system. But it is never to be presumed that the law intended that the right to construct and maintain a systеm of drainage carries with it the right to construct or maintain it in such a way as to endanger the health or life of another. This principle of law is set forth in Holmes v. Atlanta, 113 Ga. 961 (
The present action is not based on the constitutional provision that “private property shall not be taken, or damaged, for public purposes, without just and adequate compensation being first paid” (Code, § 2-301); аnd furthermore, the damage claimed does not relate to realty. Under the constitutional provision, “where the public authorities properly erect and properly maintain the improvements authorized by law, an action in tort is not maintainable by the owner of damaged property on the theory that the act of the рublic authority amounts to the maintenance of a continuing, abatable nuisance, such as would authorize periodical recoveries for subsequently accruing consequential damages, since 'that which the law authorizes to be done, if done as the law authorizes it to be done, сan not be a nuisance.’ [Citing.] In such a ease the only right of action maintainable is that conferred by the quoted provision of the constitution. It does not sound in tort, and the recovery permitted is strictly limited to the direct damage inflicted by diminishing the market value of the property damaged, as measured by the difference in its market value before and immediately after the construction of the public works, excluding all consequential damages subsequently accruing, such as might be recoverable in an action sounding in tort, based on the maintenance of a continuing, abatable nuisаnce.” (Italics ours.) City Council of Augusta v. Lamar, 37 Ga. App. 418 (
The cases cited for the plaintiff are not in point. In City of Macon v. Macon Paper Co., 35 Ga. App. 120 (
The fifth ground of the motion for new trial complains that the court erred in admitting in evidence testimony as to high winds and their velocity at the time of the rainfall, it being contended that the cause of plaintiff’s damage was limited to the flooding of water; and that the introduction of such evidence “was prejudicial to the coffee company’s case, for the reason that it tended to emphasize the severity of the storm, and was helpful to the defendant’s case that this was an act of God.” This contention is without merit, for the reason that it is common knowledge that heavy rains are often identified with strong winds which af
Ground 6 complains that the court erred in admitting testimony that before the defendant used the floor on which its merchandise was stored, it knew, through its president, that it had been flooded to a depth of twelve inches; it being contended that contributory negligence is not a dtefense in a nuisance case, and ■that the evidence prejudiced thе jury. The plaintiff’s case was based on the maintenance of a continuing, abatable nuisance since the reconstruction of the Poplar Street drainage area in 1925, it not being contended that as then constructed the system was defective or inadequate; and the plaintiff could recover only on the ground that the defendant had been negligent since that time. From a painstaking examination of the entire voluminous record it must be said, as a matter of law, that a finding is demanded that no negligence whatever was shown on the part of the defendant. It was established by uncоntradicted evidence that since 1925 there has been no appreciable increase of impervious area or introduction of water into the Poplar Street drainage district. It appears rather that the damage sustained by the plaintiff was due to a most extraordinary rainfall not reasonably to have been anticipated in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence. The local official in charge o£ the weather bureau testified that in his experience of many years it was about the worst rainfall he had known, being exceeded in only one instance, where in New Orleans there was a precipitation of fourteen inches in one day. It was shown in the present case that the extraordinary rainfall was accompanied
Judgment affirmed.
