80 W. Va. 683 | W. Va. | 1917
This suit was bronghtl/io recover damages resulting from the washing away of plaintiff’s house by an extraordinary flood on Cabin Creek in August, 1916. It is charged'in' the declaration that the defendant was operating for oil upon Cabin Creek above the premises owned by the plaintiff, and that as part of its operations it constructed an oil rig and two large tanks in the bed of said creek near the upper end
• The ground of the demurrer is that the declaration shows on its face that the injury suffered by the plaintiff was due to an act of God, to-wit, the extraordinary flood on Cabin Creek. The plaintiff admits that said flood was an extraordinary one such as could not reasonably be contemplated by the parties, but’ she insists that the defendant is liable notwithstanding this fact. It will be observed that the declaration charges that the erection of this rig and these tanks in the bed of Cabin Creek was negligent. This, it is true, is an allegation in general terms, but, as we. have repeatedly held, it is sufficient on demurrer. Grass v. Development Co., 75 W. Va. 719 and authorities there cited. On demurrer every reasonable inference must be drawn from the facts stated in the declaration in order to support the same. It may be that the character of the structures erected by the' defendant was such that it was negligence to erect them; it may be that this creek was of such character and volume that it was negligence to erect such structures theréin. This allegation of negligence must be construed to mean that a person of ordinary prudence would not have erected such structures in the bed of Cabin Creek; that the conditions which could reasonably be contemplated were such that injury to others might be expected to result therefrom.
It thus appearing from the declaration that the defendant was negligent in erecting these structures in Cabin Creek,
In Axtell v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., (Idaho) 74 Pac. 1075, it was held that no liability attaches for damages sustained by reason of the acts of God and the forces of nature, but one who by his wrongful acts augments, diverts or accelerates those forces in such a manner as to injure another is liable in damages therefor. So in this case it may be said that the defendant would not be liable for the destruction of the plaintiff’s property by the extraordinary flood on Cabin Creek, but if .it intervened, as is charged in the declaration, here, and dammed up the waters, and caused them to be diverted from their natural channel so that the plaintiff’s property was washed away, it cannot be said that the extraordinary flood was the sole cause of the injury. Under the allegations of this declaration it cannot be said that the plaintiff’s property would have been damaged whether the strue-
The authorities cited holding carriers liable for the loss of goods are instructive as showing that vis major cannot be relied upon to excuse the performance of the carrier’s duty where there is any other contributing cause. It must be borne in mind' in applying such authorities to this ease that a carrier of goods is in a sense an insurer and is therefore held liable whatever the co-operating or contributing cause, while in a case like this, to fix liability upon the defendant its negligence must co-operate with the act of God to produce the injury.
The demurrer to the declaration will be overruled and the cause remanded.
Demurrer overruled, and cause remanded.