12 R.I. 75 | R.I. | 1878
This is an action of the case to recover damages from the town of Pawtucket, for suffering water to flow from a highway in the town upon adjoining land belonging to the plaintiff. The declaration sets forth:
"The plaintiff was and still is the owner in his own right of certain real estate, situate in said town, on and adjoining a certain street and public highway in said town, called Pleasant Street, and which street said town was bound to keep in good and suitable repair, for travelling in and upon the same, and to keep certain gutters and sluiceways running in and along said highway, so and in such good repair that the water that usually and of right should run therein should not overflow and run out *76 and upon the said land of the said plaintiff; but the said town, by themselves, their officers, agents, and employees, so negligently and wrongfully kept the said street and public highway, and the sluiceways thereof in such bad repair, that the water which they ought and should have carried in and along said street overflowed on and over the land of the plaintiff, so that the said land was by said water overflowing thereon greatly damaged, and the crops growing thereon were greatly injured," c.
The defendant demurs to the declaration upon the ground that it does not properly set forth any cause of action. The plaintiff relies in support of the action upon Inman v. Tripp,
We think, therefore, that as the declaration now stands, the demurrer must be sustained.
Demurrer sustained.