Boone v. City of Akron

43 N.E.2d 315, 69 Ohio App. 95, 23 Ohio Op. 505, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 646
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 1942
Docket3477
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 N.E.2d 315 (Boone v. City of Akron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boone v. City of Akron, 43 N.E.2d 315, 69 Ohio App. 95, 23 Ohio Op. 505, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 646 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

The action below, wbicb was by Thomas IT. Boone and his wife, against the city of Akron, was not to recover damages for creating or contributing to the'creation of a nuisance; it was to recover damages for not abating a condition denominated a nuisance, which it was claimed existed in *96 the highway and affected the premises of the appellees.

The place of the claimed nuisance was in a street in the outlying section of the city. The street in question had been a township road, improved with drainage ditches on each side and from opposite directions to a low spot, to where water in the vicinity naturally drained and flowed north and across the premises of plaintiffs; and to facilitate such flow, a culvert was constructed under said highway. The evidence tends to show that the road became a street of the city in 1934, when a plat was approved by the city, and that at that time the street was improved by cindering, and that the highway, the ditches, and the drainage, were the same as they were at the time this suit was begun, which was in 1938.

The condition which is claimed to have constituted a nuisance was created by the neighbors of appellees residing along said street on the southerly, or opposite, side thereof, who, in the absence of sewage facilities, discharged into the drainage ditch in front of their premises the washwater and dishwater from' their dwellings, and also the discharge from their septic tanks.

In time of rains, such discharges by natural drainage passed through said culvert and across a part of appellees’ premises, in a small, natural drainage ditch.

The claim was that such discharges into said ditch along said highway and across appellees’ premises caused filthy smells and odors, deleterious to appellees ’ comfort and health, and created a condition sickening to look upon, and thereby damaged appellees.

No claim is made that the city did anything whatsoever to create or cause or sanction said condition, and the right of appellees to recover from the city is bottomed entirely upon the city’s failure, after knowledge of such condition, to provide sewage facilities or *97 to prevent appellees’ neighbors from using the ditch along the highway so as to cause the continuance of said condition.

So said the attorneys for appellees many times during the trial, and accordingly the trial was had upon the basis that, if the city was liable, it was because it was made liable by Section 3714, General Code; and the verdict was returned and the judgment entered in favor of appellees on that basis.

There was evidence tending to show that, when said highway became a street of the city in 1934, said condition, to some extent, existed and had existed for some time previous thereto.

Appellees made formal complaint of said condition to the city in 1938, and later, on October 7, 1938, brought this action.

Soon after the bringing of the action, the city extended the culvert that was across the street, northward and along the ditch across appellees’ premises, and filled up the ditch, thereby eliminating the source of complaint so far as it related to appellees’ premises thereafter, but failed and neglected to take any action in reference to the condition of the ditch along the highway.

The trial judge charged that the word “nuisance,” as used in the statute, meant “anything that causes hurt, inconvenience, annoyance or damage,” provided the hurt, etc., was actual, material and substantial, “and not something which is fanciful .and exists only in one’s imagination.”

In considering the legal questions presented, one should have in mind that a city is not liable for its failure to provide sewage facilities, nor for the mere failure of a board of health to enforce laws and ordinances, and that there are laws, other than Section 3714, General Code, both civil and criminal, relating *98 to-.the abatement of nuisances and the recovery of damages resulting from nuisances.

It is a general principle that a municipality is liable for an injury negligently caused by it while not in the exercise of a governmental function, and, unless there is a statute to the contrary, it is also a general principle that a municipality is not liable for an injury negligently caused by it while in the exercise of a governmental function.

As to acts of a municipality which constitute the commission of a nuisance, the city may be liable regardless of the function it is exercising; but such principle has no application to the mere failure of a municipality to abate a nuisance in a street, created solely and entirely by others, if such abatement involves the exercise of a governmental function by the municipality.

In this case it is claimed that the municipality, by Section 3714, General Code, is made liable for the presence of a nuisance in the street created by others, regardless of whether the city was acting in a governmental capacity.

That section provides that municipal corporations shall have special power to regulate the use of the-streets, and the council shall have the care, supervision and control thereof, and shall cause them to be kept open, in repair, and free from nuisance.”

A municipality, in determining what shall or shall not be done in a.street, acts in a governmental capacity and on behalf of the whole of the people and not as the owner or proprietor of the street; and it is conceded that the municipality in question, in deciding whether or not it would take any action in reference to said condition in the street, exercised a governmental function, as to which the city would not be liable unless the Legislature, by the adoption of said *99 section, made it liable for such a governmental function.

In its broadest sense, a nuisance is that which annoys or gives trouble and vexation; that which is offensive or noxious; “anything that worketh hurt, inconvenience or damage ’ ’; and the definition just quoted was substantially charged by the trial court in this case.

Keeping in mind that this statute is “in derogation of the common law and must therefore be strictly construed” (City of Wooster v. Arbenz, 116 Ohio St., 281, 156 N. E., 210), was it the intention of the Legislature, in the use of the word “nuisance” in said statute, to include a condition in the street that has no relation, physical or otherwise, to the use of the street for travel, and in no wise interfered with or affected the use of the street for the purpose of travel, and which condition was in no wise caused by any act whatsoever of the municipality, and which did not cause an injury to anyone while in the street?

“It is a familiar rule, that a thing may be within the letter of the statute and yet not within the statute, because not within its spirit, nor within the intention of its makers. This has been often asserted, and the reports are full of cases illustrating its application.

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Related

Chupek, Admr. v. City of Akron
101 N.E.2d 245 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.E.2d 315, 69 Ohio App. 95, 23 Ohio Op. 505, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-v-city-of-akron-ohioctapp-1942.