City of Evansville v. Decker

84 Ind. 325
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 7214
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 84 Ind. 325 (City of Evansville v. Decker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Evansville v. Decker, 84 Ind. 325 (Ind. 1882).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

The complaint alleges that the appellant so ¡unskilfully and negligently constructed a sewer as to cause water to flow upon and injure the property of the appellee.

A single objection is urged against the complaint. The ¡appellant’s counsel asserts that it is defective because it shows that the only unskilfulness or negligence on the part of the •corporate officers was in devising the plan of the sewer. The •objection can not prevail. It is well settled that a municipal corporation is liable for negligence in devising a plan for a sewer, as well as for negligence in carrying the plan into •execution. Cummins v. City of Seymour, 79 Ind. 491 (41 Am. R. 618); Weis v. City of Madison, 75 Ind. 241; S. C., 39 Am. R. 135; City of Indianapolis v. Tate, 39 Ind. 282; City of Indianapolis v. Lawyer, 38 Ind. 348; City of Indianapolis v. Huffer, 30 Ind. 235.

In order to understand the questions presented upon the ruling denying a new trial, it is necessary to give a brief synopsis of the evidence. There is evidence fairly tending to show that the appellee had been for many years the owner •of land near the city of Evansville; that more than twenty years before the grievances complained of he had erected a building and. appurtenances for the manufacture of soap. These buildings were erected upon the side or bank of a ravine, through which the water flowed into a stream called [327]*327Pigeon creek. The water did not flow continuously, but did flow after every heavy fall of rain, and there were well defined banks and distinct marks of a channel. The buildings were at a considerable elevation above the bottom of the ravine. Prior to 1873 the county had constructed a road across the ravine, making for that purpose an embankment of considerable height. This afterwards became one of the streets of the city. Under this street there was a culvert of •adequate dimensions, through which the water flowed freely. This culvert was removed and its place supplied with a sewer of much less capacity. While the large culvert was under the street no water was backed on to the appellee’s land. In 1874, and after the sewer had been put in the place of the culvert, there were heavy rain falls, and the water was thrown back upon the property of the appellee and remained there for several weeks. The rain continued falling for a long time, and no steps were taken to provide the water collected by the sewer with an outlet. The rainfalls were heavy, but not unprecedentedly so. Other sewers than the one mentioned had been so constructed as to carry the drainage of a part of the city into the ravine near the appellee’s property, and a great body of water was thus collected upon and near his property.

It is well settled that a municipal corporation is not responsible for an error in the exercise of a merely legislative power, and, therefore, is not liable for a failure to undertake to provide sewers and drains, unless they are made necessary by its own act. Cummins v. City of Seymour, supra; Stackhouse v. City of Lafayette, 26 Ind. 17; City of Logansport v. Wright, 25 Ind. 512; Brinkmeyer v. City of Evansville, 29 Ind. 187.

Where a municipal corporation undertakes to construct drains and sewers, the work becomes a ministerial one, and the corporation must exercise ordinary care and skill in devising the plan and performing the work. Weis v. City of Madison, supra, and authorities cited.

The corporation is bound to exercise ordinary care and skill an maintaining the sewers constructed by it, or adopted as [328]*328part of its system of drainage. City of Indianapolis v. Lawyer, supra; City of South Bend v. Paxon, 67 Ind. 228; Barton v. City of Syracuse, 36 N. Y. 54; Nims v. Mayor, etc., 59 N. Y. 500; Rochester, etc., Co. v. City of Rochester, 3 N. Y. 463; 2 Dillon Munic. Corp., sec. 1048.

A municipal corporation is not liable for consequential injuries resulting from the improvement of a public street in a careful and skilful manner. Macy v. City of Indianapolis, 17 Ind. 267; City of Lafayette v. Bush, 19 Ind. 326; Snyder v. President, etc., 6 Ind. 237; Cummins v. City of Seymour, supra.

A municipal corporation has no right to collect a body of water and lead it in a confined channel to a point near the property of a citizen, without providing a proper outlet. City of Indianapolis v. Lawyer, supra; Weis v. City of Madison, supra.

A city is not liable for injury resulting from surface-water thrown from its streets as the result of their skilful and proper improvement, but is liable for injuries proximately resulting,, if it collects the water into a channel and pours it upon another’s land. Templeton v. Voshloe, 72 Ind. 134 (37 Am. R. 150); Cairo, etc., R. R. Co. v. Stevens, 73 Ind. 278 (38 Am.. R. 139); Taylor v. Fickas, 64 Ind. 167 (31 Am. R. 114);. Schlichter v. Phillipy, 67 Ind. 201; Weis v. City of Madison, supra; 2 Dill. Munic. Corp., sec. 1051 (3d ed.); Byrnes v. City of Cohoes, 67 N. Y. 204.

Against extraordinary and unprecedented freshets municipal corporations are not bound to provide, but they are bound to make provision for such as may be reasonably expected to-occur, even though their occurrence be at irregular and wide intervals of time. Ordinary diligence requires that the corporate officers should take into consideration the past history of the watercourses, and make reasonable provision for freshets of a similar character to those which have previously occurred, and which were not of an extraordinary character. City of Madison v. Ross, 3 Ind. 236; Allen v. City of Chippewa Falls, 52 Wis. 430; S. C., 38 Am. R. 748.

[329]*329The care to be exercised in devising and carrying into effect the work of constructing a public sewer should be fairly proportionate to the nature and magnitude of the undertaking and the consequences likely to flow from a negligent breach of duty. Mayor, etc., v. Bailey, 2 Denio, 433.

A city is not bound to make inlets into public sewers for the purpose of draining private property lying outside of the corporate limits; but when a great body of surface-water is collected in a drain and conducted near to or upon such property, the city#must use ordinary care in providing means for thS flow of the water into some natural stream or water way. It can not gather the water together, confine it in a sewer, and thus conduct it to the corporate limits and cast it upon another’s land. Cummins v. City of Seymour, supra; O’Brien v. City of St. Paul, 18 Minn. 176 ; Kobs v. City of Minneapolis, 22 Minn. 159; O’Brien v. City of St. Paul, 33 Am. R. 470; Noonan v. City of Albany, 79 N. Y. 470; S. C., 35 Am. R. 540.

"Where the natural location of the land is below the grade of the street, and from this cause the water flows upon it, no action can be maintained against a municipal corporation that does no more than grade and improve its streets in a reasonably careful and skilful manner, although such improvement may greatly increase the flow of water upon the land. 2 Dill. Munic. Corp., section 1051.

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84 Ind. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-evansville-v-decker-ind-1882.