Cabral v. City & County of Honolulu

32 Haw. 872, 1933 Haw. LEXIS 1
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1933
DocketNos. 2080 AND 2081.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 872 (Cabral v. City & County of Honolulu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabral v. City & County of Honolulu, 32 Haw. 872, 1933 Haw. LEXIS 1 (haw 1933).

Opinion

*873 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This is an action for damages caused to dwelling houses and other property, the allegation being that the negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the damage. The main allegations of the declaration are as follows: That on November 18, 1930, and for many years prior thereto the defendant maintained a culvert over Waolani Stream at Wyllie Street; that in 1911 the defendant installed a large drain carrying storm waters from Nuuanu Street and in 1924 a second drain carrying flood waters from Alewa Heights, each emptying into the Waolani Stream above the culvert on Wyllie Street and at right angles to the ordinary flow of the stream; that in repeated instances of heavy rainfall prior to 1930, it was demonstrated that the culvert at Wyllie Street was inadequate to carry the storm waters of the stream and that this inadequacy was well known to the defendant ; that the defendant’s .attention was repeatedly called to the inadequacy of the culvert but that it was not until after November 18, 1930, that a sufficient bridge was erected at the point referred to; that on November 18, 1930, after a heavy rainfall the waters of Waolani Stream, augmented by the waters of the two sewers, overflowed the culvert and rose to a height of about two and one-half feet above the level of Wyllie Street, backed up and flooded the premises of the plaintiff and of other abutting owners, carried away and demolished two houses belonging to the plaintiff and caused injury to houses and other property of other abutting owners in the vicinity.

In the first count damages are asked for the destruc *874 tion of the plaintiff’s dwellings and other property. In the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh counts damages are asked for injury Caused to dwellings and other property of other abutting owners whose claims were assigned to the plaintiff. The answer was a general denial. The case was tried without a jury. The court made the following findings, inter alia: That owing to construction of the drains from Alewa Heights and from Nuuanu Street and to the development of the surrounding country the flow of the stream “has been considerably increased, both as to amount and rapidity during the past twenty or thirty years so' that from about 1921 up to' November 18, 1930, the culvert in question has been insufficient to carry off .the flood waters” of the stream “during the heavy rains”; that the result has been that during heavy rains the culvert has “operated as a.dam causing the water” of the stream “to back up and form an artificial lake, flooding the property” of the claimants along the bank of the stream; that during floods the waters of the stream “sometimes washed over the culvert or bridge and were somewhat diverted by the same and by a concrete wall on the top of the culvert so that they flowed into and flooded the property of Soper” (one of the claimants), “below the culvert”; that in 1927, during a heavy rain storm, the culvert impounded the waters of the stream and caused them to flood the premises and property “of the householders living along the bank of the stream as well as the Soper premises below the culvert”; that the defendant was notified of this flood and of the damage done and was requested to “remedy the situation”; that the defendant “failed to do anything with regard to remedying this situation and continued to maintain the culvert, giving as an excuse therefor that the property owners objected to a proposed plan to deepen the stream bed”; that “on November 18, .1930, an un *875 usually heavy rain occurred in the watershed” of the stream, causing another flood, in which “the culvert again acted as a dam and backed up the water behind it, flooding and damaging the property of the residents as before, including also the Soper property below the culvert” ; that “the negligent maintenance of this culvert by the defendant was the proximate cause or a proximate cause of the injury and damage”; that the waters of the stream were impounded and caused to back up to such an extent that they lifted the plaintiff’s houses and floated them down the stream for some distance, “thus practically destroying these two houses”; that “the evidence clearly shows that although this flood of November 18, 1930, was unusual or extraordinary it was not so unusual or so extraordinary that it could not have been anticipated that such a flood would occasionally occur” and that “such unusual or extraordinary floods have and do occasionally occur after intervals of irregular duration”; that with the exception of Blake who is named in the third count “the claimants were not guilty of negligence or contributory negligence or assumption of risk so as to defeat their claims and that they acted with reasonable care and prudence.”

The court found in favor of the plaintiff, in amounts stated, upon all of the claims except those declared upon in the third and fourth counts. It disallowed the claim in the fourth count on behalf of one Ketcheson on the ground that no written statement of claim had been filed with the mayor and the board of supervisors within six-months of the date of injury and disallowed that of Blake, in the third count, on the ground that he was guilty of contributory negligence in maintaining his house too near the ordinary flow of the stream for safety. In this latter respect the findings of the court were that “this house * * * was built almost on the channel of the stream and *876 very close to the mauka face of the culvert. No person of ordinary prudence and intelligence would have constructed this house in such a dangerous position, about 6 feet below the level of Wyllie Street, and having done so must be deemed to have assumed any risk from floods; * * * that Blake bought this house with full knowledge of the entire situation and he therefore stands in the shoes of the original owner” and cannot recover; that the original owner, from whom Blake purchased the house, was guilty of negligence in building it at the point where it stood and that Blake was likewise guilty of negligence in maintaining it at that place; “that in all probability if it had not been for the culvert in question the injury to Blake’s residence * * * would have been much more severe owing to the fact that the culvert impeded the speed of the waters of the stream.”

Both parties sued out writs of error, the defendant claiming that no judgment whatever should have been awarded against it and the plaintiff claiming that she should have recovered on behalf of Blake and Ketcheson and to a greater extent in her own behalf.

Undisputed evidence showed that the culvert in question was constructed in or about the year 1900, by the Territory of Hawaii, and that until some time after November, 1930, it was maintained by the defendant substantially without change. Its semicircular opening for the passage of water was sixteen feet in diameter and nine feet high or a total area or face of the opening of one hundred fourteen square feet. The solid masonry surrounding that opening and supporting the bridge presented to the stream' a face of twelve hundred square feet. The drain from Alewa Heights, constructed about the year 1921, was forty-two inches in diameter and that from Nuuanu Street, installed in 1924, was twenty-seven inches in diameter. Both were made to empty into the

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Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 872, 1933 Haw. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabral-v-city-county-of-honolulu-haw-1933.