131 A. 283 | Pa. | 1925
Plaintiff sued to recover the damages which it alleged were sustained by reason of defective work in the construction of a sewer in Madison Avenue in the City of Allegheny, now a part of the City of Pittsburgh, along the side of the property owned by plaintiff, and for a *250
negligent failure to keep the sewer in repair, after notice that it was in need thereof. From the judgment entered on a verdict for plaintiff, the city appeals; and, — possibly because the recovery was so much less than the money actually expended by plaintiff in restoring the property to its former condition, — only assigns as error the refusal of the court below to enter judgment for defendant non obstante veredicto. Under such circumstances, there being no writings to consider, the testimony, and all the inferences fairly deducible therefrom, if favorable to plaintiff, must be taken as true, and all unfavorable must be rejected (Fuller v. Stewart Coal Co.,
Viewed in the way stated, the testimony may be summarized as follows: In 1895, the sewer was constructed, at the depth of some forty feet below the natural surface of the ground. The work was done by sinking shafts at intervals along the street, tunnelling between them, supporting the strata of earth, at and above the top of the tunnels, by heavy timbers, upheld by equally heavy posts at the sides of the tunnels, with braces running diagonally from the posts to the roof, — all of this part of the construction, it is admitted, being bound to rot in course of time, — and then building a circular sewer within the opening formed by the posts, the braces and the roof. By this method there necessarily remained *251 a large open space between the circular sewer and the sides and roof of the tunnel, which had to be filled in with earth, firmly tamped, if it was to remain as a permanent support for the superjacent soil. So long as the posts and roof remained in good condition the soil would be and in fact was upheld, irrespective of the character of the filling and tamping, which the city averred was done as well as the circumstances permitted.
In 1902 plaintiff bought its property on Madison Avenue, along the line of the sewer, and in the same year commenced, and subsequently completed, the erection of its bank building, with adequate foundation walls resting on a substratum of sand and gravel, fully sufficient to sustain it, so long as the sewer construction above referred to was kept in a proper condition. In 1908 the building began to show cracks, which increased to so great an extent as to cause fear that it would fall; repeated notices thereof were given to the city authorities, but nothing being done, either to repair the injury or prevent it becoming greater, plaintiff itself made an investigation, which showed that the timbers used in shoring and roofing the tunnel had rotted away, so much so that some of it would crumble in the hand, and that the back-filling alone was not sufficient to sustain the overlying soil, which had thereupon settled, dragging down plaintiff's property with it, and causing the injury of which complaint is made. The city was again asked to make the necessary repairs to plaintiff's building, and to prevent further injury to it, but refused to do anything; whereupon plaintiff had the work done, and sued the city to recover the expense thus incurred.
It is clear that if a method of construction is adequate at the time of performance, but the builder should reasonably anticipate that it will later become insufficient owing to a decay of the materials used, a municipality, like every other such builder, is affected with knowledge of this fact, and must, by proper inspection and repair, prevent injury to others. We have constantly applied *252
this rule in actions against public corporations: Norristown v. Moyer,
In Vanderslice v. City of Philadelphia,
So, also, in Gehringer v. Lehigh County,
The city also claims that it is not bound to laterally support property abutting on its streets (though we stated the contrary in Pollock v. Pittsburgh, Bessemer Lake Erie R. R. Co.,
Nor is the question one of lateral support, but, as stated, one of a negligent failure to substitute for the timbers, which were amply strong when put in place, but which, in course of time, had so rotted as not to be able to support the overlying soil, either new timbers, or something else which would give the necessary support. Moreover, if the law as to lateral support did apply, it also has no relation to questions of negligence; the right to it, so far as concerns the soil only, is absolute, whether or not there was negligence (1 R. C. L. 383-4; Matulys v. Phila. Reading Coal Iron Co.,
The judgment of the court below is affirmed. *255