City of Guthrie v. Nix, Halsell & Co.

49 P. 917, 5 Okla. 555
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 P. 917 (City of Guthrie v. Nix, Halsell & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Guthrie v. Nix, Halsell & Co., 49 P. 917, 5 Okla. 555 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McAtee, J.:

The facts in this case are sufficiently stated in 3 Oklahoma Reports, p. 136, where it was considered upon a question of pleading.

It was assigned for error that the court refused to give instructions numbered 5 and 6, which were offered on behalf of the defendant upon the trial, which are as follows:

“ If you find from the evidence that the street in front of the building occupied by the plaintiffs, under the sidewalk, had been excavated by persons other than the defendant, and that such excavation tended to allow water flowing over the sidewalk to flow into the cellar, then the plaintiffs cannot recover.
“6. If you find that the excavation under the sidewalk in front of the building occupied by the plaintiffs, *556 contributed to the injury of tlie plaintiff’s goods, then plaintiff’s cannot recover.”

And in giving instructions 3 and 4, as follows:

“The court instructed you that in order for the plaintiffs to recover in this case, they must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that, in the month of June, 1892, the plaintiffs were conducting a wholesale grocery business in the city of Guthrie, and were occupying a certain building situated on Oklahoma avenue, at a point near the intersection of said avenue and Vine street, as their place of business; that a part of their stock of goods was in the basement of tlie building so occupied; that their building was properly built on the grade established by the agents of the defendants; that the defendant negligently constructed wliat is commonly called a sewer under the surface of the street known as Oklahoma avenue near the place where the plaintiffs were carrying on their business; that they also permitted obstructions to be placed and left in front of the building and near the gutter of the street in front of said building.
“That by reason of such negligent construction of the aforesaid sewer and negligent condition of the street in front of the building aforesaid, the drainage was insufficient to carry off the water which accumulated at that point, and that such water flooded the basement of the building wherein plaintiff’s goods were stored, thereby causing a loss to the plaintiffs in the sum set forth in their complaint.
“4. If you believe from the evidence that the city of Guthrie, on Oklahoma avenue, in said city, fixed the grade and constructed the street and caused to be constructed sewers and drains on said street to carry off the surplus water,- which necessarily in cases of rain ran down said street by reason of said grading, and that in June, 1892, there c.ame a rain and said sewers and drains were stopped up, or were otherwise defective, so that they would not carry off the surplus water, and thereby the water of said rain was forced into the basement of the *557 building in question, and tlie plaintiffs thereby damaged, then the jury should find for the plaintiffs for the amount which the proof shows such damage to be.”

Special interrogatories were at the request of the defendant submitted to the jury. In reply to which the jury stated, “that the defendant had not used ordinary care and skill in the construction of the sewer across Oklahoma avenue, which was not sufficient to carry off the surface water created from ordinary hard rains, and that there was an excavation underneath the sidewalk in front of the building occupied by the plaintiffs when the injury complained of, occurred, of which the plaintiffs were informed and that if the excavation under the sidewalk had not been made and existed there the water would not have flowed into the basement of the building from the street, that the rain was a usual hard rain, and that the city of Guthrie did not make the excavation under the sidewalk in front of the building occupied by the plaintiffs.”

The question is here directly raised by the exceptions to the giving and refusal to give instructions, and the assignments of error thereon, whether the plaintiff, in making, or while occupant of, the building, permitted the excavation under the sidewalk, was guilty of contributory negligence, so as to prevent recovery from the negligence of the city in failure to construct a sufficient sewer to carry off a usual hard rain.

It was decided in the case of City of Guthrie v. Beamer, 3 Okla. 652, that when the survey and plat had been made and adopted by the inhabitants of the city of Guthrie, and afterwards adopted and approved by the secretary of the interior, that such survey and plat, act of congress and of the secretary of the interior, was in effect a dedication of the public uses of all such portions *558 of the townsite as were designated by such plat as streets and alleys, and had the effect to divest the individual claim by settlement or occupancy of such portion.

And the fee of the streets, including the sidewalks, is in the municipality, to be held in trust for the use and benefit of the public. This dedication includes the sidewalk, and when the plaintiff or their lessors entered uppn the sidewalk and made the excavation, they did it in the street, of which they were divested of any interest, and which was dedicated to the public uses. And the appropriation which they made was for their private interest and benefit and advantage. It does not appear that any permission was obtained from the city government to make the excavation, nor is it evident how such permission, if it were shown, could put the plaintiff in any other or better position to recover against the city. The act of making the excavation is admitted to have been wholly by the plaintiffs and for their own benefit. They made it at their own risk. It would be difficult to see upon what principle of law or equity a private lot owner, seeking to make his property abutting upon the street, more valuable for his own private purposes, by making an excavation in the street which is dedicated to public uses and under the control of the municipality, for private purposes, can make any claim for damages under circumstances in which, but for that excavation, no such injury would have occurred.

The excavation was an appropriation by the plaintiffs for the advantage of their private business, of property dedicated to public uses. Such an excavation was by the supreme court of Kansas denominated a trespass in the case of Jansen v. City of Atchison, 16 Kan. 359, in which Judge Brewer, stating the opinion of the court, *559 said that before a lot owner can be held responsible, there must appear some negligence on his part, or he must have trespassed upon the sidewalk by obstruction upon the surface or excavation beneath, and such negligence, excavation or obstruction caused the injury.

It was held in Nelson v. Godfrey, 12 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P. 917, 5 Okla. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-guthrie-v-nix-halsell-co-okla-1897.