Brose v. City of Dubuque

193 Iowa 763
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 2, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 193 Iowa 763 (Brose v. City of Dubuque) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brose v. City of Dubuque, 193 Iowa 763 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Preston, J.

— Deceased was about seven years of age, and lived with her parents, Charles G. Brose and wife, in the city of Dubuque, some six blocks from the scene of the accident. On July 9, 1919, she was visiting at the home of her aunt, Bertha Kennecker, whose home was situated on Lot 28, "West’s Addition to Dubuque. The Bee Branch sewer passes in the vicinity of and through Lots 27 and 28, West’s Addition, and runs in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, the flow of the water being to the southeast, and empties into the Mississippi River. It is 7 feet high and 14 feet wide inside, constructed of rock and concrete. The concrete portions are 10 feet in diameter. It has a stone arch across the top, and concrete and rock side walls and bottom. The side walls are two feet thick. It is covered with earth from the Kennecker property across the Milleville road, over into the Heim property, about 720 feet. The intake, about 100 feet southeast, is built after the same design as at the end of the stone sewer in the Kennecker property. The sewers are of the same dimensions. It is partly open and partly covered, on Lots 27 and 28. The lots are large, and there is a large lawn between the houses on the two lots. The sewer was covered by about three feet of earth and grass, which formed part of the lawn at the point where the earth caved in and deceased was precipitated into the water. The sewer itself did not cave in. It was the ground over the rock part of the sewer that gave way; and when the ground gave way, deceased went down into the ditch below the sewer. The evidence shows that the dirt or sod had become undermined by washing. The point where the caving occurred was about 12 feet above the point where the ditch is open. The open ditch below extends about 100 feet southeast, when it is again covered under an alley or street; and from there on to the river are places that are covered and places that are open.

The sewer was constructed partly in 1898, and finished in 1915, in a ravine and natural watercourse. Some of the evidence tends to show that, at places, the ditch was not wide enough for the sewer, and some excavation had to be made. Generally speaking, however, the ditch was as large as the sewer, and the ditch was of the same size, area, and dimensions as the original ditch. The original ditch, or watercourse, had been [765]*765there for 60 years or more — as long as the witnesses recollect. For many years it was not covered. It went through these properties more or less diagonally, with something of a bend above the intake at the lower end of the open part of the sewer on the lots. The original ditch entered Lot 27 near the center, and proceeded easterly and passed over a part of Lot 28, which lies immediately south of Lot 27. It was an open ditch, and had always been a part of the lots before the sewer was built. Thereafter, the lot was filled up, and after it was filled, it was in better shape than before. The lawn covering the space between the two homes came within two feet of the mouth or exposed part of the sewer on these lots. - It had been in that condition for many years. We do not understand that the city had either purchased or condemned the land for the sewer; it simply built it in the watercourse. The sewer was built by the city in accordance with plans and specifications of its engineers. The owners of the property, knowing the general situation, as they had for years, and living on the properties, had not built any fences or barriers across the path or across the upper end near the open part of the ditch on their properties, or at the sides of the open space; nor had the city done so, or put any screens across the intake at the lower part of the open ditch. Defendant had no control over the properties, and it contends that, as it was private property, it had no right to build fences or barriers thereon. This sewer commences about two miles above the limits of the city, and runs through the south and east portions of the city, a distance of from four'.to five miles. The upper two and one-half miles of the sewer form an open ditch, about one mile of which is within the northwestern limits of the city. Into it is drained all surface water from the hills and valleys throughout the entire district. It was used for draining and for carrying storm water. Its course is winding, with bends and turns all the way. It runs through streets and private property.

There was a path across the lawn, used to go from the rear of one house to the other. -It was across the covered part of the sewer, which had been used as and became a part of the lawn. The path was used and traveled by the owners of the two lots. The public had no right to use the path, and did not use it. I)e-[766]*766ceased and her mother and her mother’s other children often used this path to go from one house to the other. The path AA'as about 14 feet from the mouth of the seAver. The path Avas about a foot -wide,' — pretty well worn. It could plainly be seen. It AA'as made by people, walking back and forth in the yard between the tAA'o houses. The ground where the path AA'as, appeared solid, and that AA'as its condition for several years prior to July 9th. There was nothing about the path that appeared to be unsafe and dangerous. The ground where the path AA'as, was even Avith the balance of the lot, — that is, before the storm, and before it caA'ed in. Outside of the beaten path, the laAA'n AA'as sodded all OA'er to Avithin about two feet of the mouth of the sewer. As deceased was walking over the covering of ground and sod OA'er the seAver about the center of the arch, the covering gave way, and the force of the Avater SAA'ept her into the sewer. Her body AA'as found the next day, some 10 or 12 blocks beloAV, and in the sewer. A few seconds after the ground gave AA'ay under deceased, the ground gave Avay under Mrs. Kennecker’s feet, and she went doAirn. It appears that deceased and the other children had, prior to this date, played in the laAvn over the seAver, and when the water was low, they had played in the open ditch, building dams in the ditch Avith rocks, just to make a little pool there to play; that there was always a little water running; that there Avas very little water, except in tiroes of rain; that the greater part of the water carried through the sewer AA'as storm water. At the time of the accident, deceased was not playing, but was going from one house to the other. It was, at the time, raining very hard. The water had not overflowed the banks of the ditch, but it was up to the top of the banks. As the Avater came out of the mouth of the sewer, there AA'as so much coming doAA'n that it couldn’t flow out of it, and it came out and SAviried around. The’water in the ditch looked as though it was going around in circles and Avhirlpools,— “pretty wild looking water,” as one witness puts it. Before July 9th, the ditch Avas about 10 to 12 feet deep and about 20 feet wide. A witness testifies that he had seen it filled to its banks with water, prior to July 9th. People had thrown rubbish into the ditch, — rocks, etc. The intake beloAV the property in question, prior to July 9th, AA'as fairly clean. There AA'as [767]*767some water in the yard, but the yard was not covered with the water at the time of the accident. Immediately after, it got higher, and rose a couple of feet. All the ground around there which, prior to July 9th, was a lawn, had been washed away by the storm. The evidence does not show whether deceased was drowned before or after she was swept into the intake of the sewer, a hundred feet below the cave-in.

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Bluebook (online)
193 Iowa 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brose-v-city-of-dubuque-iowa-1922.