69 Vt. 330 | Vt. | 1897
(1) This action is to recover for damages sustained by the negligence of the defendant in the construction and maintenance of its sewer. On the trial the defendant took several exceptions which it now insists upon, based upon the ground that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover because none of the sewer and none of the sewage complained of came upon the plaintiff’s premises. The defendant’s charter in regard to constructing and maintaining sewers, in legal effect, is the same as the charter of the village of Rutland which was before this court in Winn v. Rutland, 52 Vt. 481, in which it was held that the defendant was liable for negligence in constructing and maintaining its sewers to the damage of the plaintiff. In that case the defect, complained of, was on the plaintiff’s premises, and the court say the use which the defendant put it to amounted to a taking of the plaintiff’s land within the perview of the constitutional requirement that compensation shall be made.
The defendant relies upon this decision to support his contention that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, because neither the sewer, nor any of the sewage came upon the plaintiff’s premises, except in the condition of noxious and unhealthy vapors. The other cases cited by him, in support of this point, relate to taking of land for streets, highways and railways. In Winn v. Rutland, it is not decided that the plaintiff would have been remediless, if the defective sewer had not been on his premises, if it caused him damage. The maxim “Sicutere tuo ut ahenum non laedas”
(2) The plaintiff filed several specifications of his claims for damages. The first is for loss and damage on account of decrease in the value of plaintiff’s property, and incapacity to sell the same, caused by the defendant’s defective sewer. Considerable testimony was received in reference to this item, but at the close of the testimony, the plaintiff withdrew this claim, and the court told the jury not to consider the evidence relating to it. The defendant seasonably objected and excepted to’all testimony tending to show damage to the plaintiff under each and every item of his specifications, without showing damage to his land, or a taking thereof. The plaintiff concedes that no recovery could be had under this item. The defendant contends that inasmuch as the evidence was received against its exception, the court, under our decisions, could not cure the error in receiving it by instructing the jury to disregard it. We do not decide whether this would have been true if its exception to this item had been placed upon the ground now claimed, that no recovery could be had under it. The defendant’s exception to this testimony was placed upon a specified ground, and not the one now urged against it. The trial
(3) The testimony of Dr. H. G. Belden received against the defendant’s exception which related to patients which he had attended living in other houses, whose sickness he attributed to the escape of sewer gas from the locality complained of by the plaintiff, was improperly received. Every such case of sickness, although occurring in houses
(4) If the plaintiff had been allowed to recover for injury to the health of his wife, other than for what he expended in nursing and doctoring her, and in loss of her services and society it would have been error. We do not find that he was allowed so to recover. The charge confines his recovery on this item to his expenses for medicines and tonics for the wife if it was shown her sickness was caused by the defendant’s negligence. This was unobjectionable.
(5) The defendant requested the court to charge the jury : “That if the jury are satisfied, by a fair balance of testimony that the damage suffered by the plaintiff, if any there was, was due in whole or in part to the defective plan or method of construction of the so-called Mason sewer, laid in the bed of the brook, then for such damage so resulting the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.” The doctrine of this request is recognized in Winn v. Rutland, 52 Vt. 481. It is there said:
“In acting under the chartered power, the village authorities must necessarily deliberate and adjudge upon a system or plan of the work, — when to perform it and where to locate it. So far no liability to private action is incurred for errors in judgment, or want of forecast. * * * * * Having devised a plan, it may be carried into execution with due care, without risk of private action. The charter makes the construction of the work lawful, and if the work be done in a proper manner, the chartered power is a complete bar to a claim of consequential damages to persons or property.” Mr. Dillon recognizes the same*335 doctrine in Yol. 2, § 1046, of his work on Municipal Corporations. He says, “the corporation is not liable to a civil action for wholly failing to provide drainage or sewerage, nor probably for any defect or want of efficiency in the plan of sewerage or drainage adopted; nor, according to the prevailing view, for the insufficient size or want of capacity of gutters or sewers for the purpose intended.” This he says is because in these respects the municipality acts judicially or quasi judicially. To the same effect are, Child v. Boston, 4 Allen 41; Johnston v. Dist. Columbia, 118 U. S. 19; Mills v. Brooklyn, 32 N. Y. 489.
The defendant’s evidence tended to show that the condition of the sewer and sewá'ge complained of, was not due to the negligence of the defendant, but to the defectiveness of the original design, and plan of construction of the receiving sewer. Hence there was evidence to which this request was applicable. The court did not comply with it, nor make any charge upon the subject. For this refusal the defendant excepted. On the authorities cited this refusal was error.
(6) The defendant also excepted to the charge of the court on the subject of exemplary damages. The court told the jury that if they found that the plaintiff was entitled to recover some actual damage, then, although the plaintiff could not claim it as a matter of right, they might in their discretion award him exemplary damages if they found the defendant’s, negligence, causing the actual damage, was so gross as to amount to a wanton and wilful disregard of the rights of the plaintiff. To the allowance of this class of damages in this case the defendant excepted. He does not complain of the language of the charge, if this class of damages were allowable under the circumstances of the case. The negligence complained of, and which the plaintiffs testimony tended to establish, was that the trustees of the defendant did not cause to be properly connected the sewers running east and west with the sewer in Stevens brook running
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.