Bickel v. Commissioners of Sewerage

6 S.W.2d 1112, 224 Ky. 614, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 665
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 15, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 6 S.W.2d 1112 (Bickel v. Commissioners of Sewerage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bickel v. Commissioners of Sewerage, 6 S.W.2d 1112, 224 Ky. 614, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 665 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Affirming.

Appellants instituted this action and by way of relief sought to enjoin appellees the commissioners of sewerage of Louisville and the city of Louisville from excavating an open sewer, part of a project for sewer extension in course of installation by the city, and turning into it sewage from the city. They predicate their right to the relief sought upon the ground that the proposed open sewer and draining into it sewage will inevitably be a nuisance. Appellants were interested because they owned property near which the proposed sewer will run. The city defended upon the theory that *615 it is a storm water outlet and not an open sewer which it proposes to construct, and that the drainage through it will possess none of the objectionable qualities alleged in the petition and will not constitute a nuisance. The chancellor adjudged that appellants failed to manifest the right to the relief sought and dismissed their petition. Hence the appeal.

In extending its system of subterranean sewers the city of Louisville has recently so improved large sections of newly added territory, and these new sewers drain to and will be connected -with a trunk line known as the Southern Outfall sewer, which empties into the Ohio river. By calculation based upon observations extending over a long period of time, and judging the future by the past, it has been determined that when these new sewers are connected with the Southern Outfall sewer, due to the fact that they carry not only waste water and waste matter from residences and 'business houses, but also all surface water when it rains, there will be occasions during periods of excessive rainfall that the Southern Outfall sewer will be taxed beyond its capacity. During periods of all ordinary rainfall the Southern Outfall sewer will be ample to drain off both the sewage and the surface water; and the occasions when it will be insufficient, due to unusual rainfall, will not occur more frequently than twice per month on an average. It became necessary for the city and the sewerage' commissioners to devise some means of taking care of the excess water during these periods of unusual rainfall. Being limited in the amount of money at their disposal, they are unable now to construct an additional subterranean or covered sewer to the Ohio river. The sanitary engineer employed by the appellees devised the plan, execution of which appellants seek to enjoin, and before the plan was adopted or any steps taken to put it into execution it was submitted to the state board of health for approval, and was approved.

The plan in brief is this: By an ingenious arrangement a spillway is provided in connection with certain of the sewers leading to the Southern Outfall sewer whereby, when during exceptional rainstorms the combination of surface water and sewage has raised the stream in these subterranean sewers to a depth of approximately four feet, three feet and nine inches to be exact, part of the stream will be diverted from the sewers *616 over a spillway and flow into the proposed open sewer which leads to the Ohio river. According to the testimony of the expert sanitary engineers, who have testified for appellees herein, when at snch times there is an overflow from the sewers into the open drain the proportion of objectionable matter in the stream will be so small as to be harmless, especially under the further safeguards provided. Their evidence is that, in addition to the enormous ratio of water to objectionable waste matter composing the sewer content that will be diverted from the subterranean sewers to the open sewer, the latter will also drain several thousand acres of land, the fresh-water drainage from which in these periods of unusual rainfall will also be mixed with and further dilute the stream diverted from the subterranean sewer. It appears that in what is termed “dry sewerage,” which is the average content of a city’s sewers, consisting of waste water and waste solid matter, without the admixture of surface drainage from rainfall, there is a ratio of 1,000 parts of water to 1 part of solid matter, while as to fecal matter, the most objectionable sewerage content, the proportion is 3,000 parts of water to 1 of fecal matter. The evidence is that with the admixture of the quantity of surface water necessary to raise the streams in the sewers here in question high enough so that any will escape over the spillway, the ratio of solid matter to water will be 1 to 44,000, while the ratio of fecal matter to water will be 1 to 133,000. Appellants live on the Eighteenth Street road where the proposed open sewer will cross.it, and the evidence is that by the time anything diverted from the sewers reaches this point the addition of local surface water which has'drained into the open sewer will so dilute the stream that the proportion of fecal matter to water will be 1 to 319,200. In addition to this, it is shown for appellees that under the plans for the open sewer its grade or fall will be such that its stream will flow at “critical velocity,” explained to mean that the' velocity of the water will be such that all solid matter will be kept' in suspension as to prevent sedimentation and' at' the same time such as to prevent scouring or erosion, of The' bottom or banks of the drain. Consequently, the testimony for appelleees establishes that there -will hemo sedimentation of the objectionable and dangerous waste; matter from the sewers on the banks of the storm :watel' - *617 outlet and pockets or pools will not be formed to stagnate and be .offensive and menacing to health.

The evidence goes into detail as to the engineering principles involved, the size of the bed of the stream, the angles of the banks, the grade thereof, or amount of fall per unit the water will have. Statement of these details are not necessary to a determination of the question presented by this appeal. It is sufficient to say that the testimony of the drainage and sanitary experts and engineers, who have testified herein, is to the effect that under the conditions herein described the amount of objectionable waste matter diverted from the city’s system of underground sewers will be so small a part of the contents of the stream of water that will flow through the open sewer that it will be harmless. It will be so constructed as to size and plans and grade that none of this small percentage of objectionable waste matter will be permitted to be deposited on its banks and no water impregnated with the.small percentage of objectionable waste will be left standing in pockets or pools to stagnate or give off odors or create unhealthy or unsanitary conditions.

. Perhaps the best evidence that the proposed storm water outlet will be unobjectionable is the fact that its construction and operation under the plans proposed has met with the approval of our state board of health. If there were reasonable apprehension of danger that this enterprise would likely be a breeder of diseases and a menace to the health of the community, we feel that our state board of health would register the first protest. ,

Opposed to this convincing evidence from experts on the question to the effect that the proposed open storm water outlet will possess none of the objectionable features imputed to it by appellants in their pleadings as the basis for its abatement as a nuisance, we find the record contains no evidence of probative value. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.W.2d 1112, 224 Ky. 614, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bickel-v-commissioners-of-sewerage-kyctapphigh-1928.