City of Holdenville v. Griggs

1966 OK 34, 411 P.2d 521
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 22, 1966
Docket41186
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1966 OK 34 (City of Holdenville v. Griggs) 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 Holdenville v. Griggs, 1966 OK 34, 411 P.2d 521 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

HALLEY, Chief Justice.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff Bessie Griggs sues the defendant City of Holdenville for damages to her residence property and the contents thereof alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant in the construction and maintenance of its sewer disposal system in the City of Holdenville.

In her petition plaintiff alleges that sewage carried in the main disposal lines of the defendant backed up and flowed through the lateral lines connecting her residence with the main sewer system causing damage to her residence and furnishings. She alleges specific acts of negligence against the defendant as follows:

“(1) Maintaining a sewer line in the vicinity of the home of the plaintiff inadequate to dispose of water accumulating in the area.
“(2) Maintaining a sewer line in the vicinity of the home of the plaintiff which contained a faulting check valve.”

Summarized, the evidence is as follows: Plaintiff owns certain residential property in the City of Holdenville, and has occupied the property for more than 25 years. The residence was connected with the sewer system of the defendant City of Holden-ville. Over a period of years, commencing in 1957, the sewer would hack up from the main lines through the lateral pipe connections to plaintiff’s house, causing the bath tub and lavatory in plaintiff’s house to overflow. In 1957 she reported this condition to Cecil Robinson, City Water Commissioner of the City of Holdenville. Robinson, or other city employees, came to her house and ran a wire cable through the sewer lines, unstopping the lines. The overflowed sewage receded. A similar incident occurred in ’58. She again contacted Robinson. The city sent out some men,' and they unstopped the sewers.

In June or July of ’59 the sewers again overflowed into her house. Plaintiff appeared before the city council. A neighbor by the name of Carter accompanied her. Carter was having a similar difficulty. No definite action was taken by the defendant City to alleviate the condition. About 6:00 A.M. on the morning of September 24, 1959, plaintiff awoke from her sleep and smelled the odor of sewage in her house. She investigated and found that raw sewage had overflowed the bath tub, the stool and the lavatory in her bathroom and was running over the top of all of these fixtures. The raw sewage, including fecal matter, was 6 inches deep in her bathroom and 3 or 4 inches deep in her bedroom and kitchen. She again called Robinson, the Water Commissioner. Pie came to the premises and with the use of a wire cable which he ran through the lines, unstopped them. The sewage-water subsided, leaving about 2 inches of raw sewage in the bath tub and about one inch on the floor of the bathroom.

Two licensed plumbers testified as witnesses for the plaintiff. They inspected *524 the premises involved on the day the overflowing occurred. They ran a wire cable through the lateral sewer lines from plaintiff’s residence to the main sewer line in the alley and found these lines to be clear of stoppage. Both of these plumbers testified as experts, testifying that the cause of the overflowing was that the main sewer line was too small to carry the load it was required to carry. The line was only 6 inches in diameter. These two witnesses explained that a 6 inch line would accommodate the average sewage disposal from two houses, but not from the number of houses using the sewer in the vicinity of plaintiff’s house.

Some time prior to the incident out of which this litigation arises, the defendant City of Holdenville caused to be installed in the lateral sewer line from plaintiff’s house, at a point where the lateral line enters the main sewer line, a check-valve. Witnesses explained that if the check-valve operated properly, it would prevent the sewage from the main line from backing up into plaintiff’s house. When the water commissioner was called regarding the overflowing on September 24th, he stated that he had been having trouble with this check-valve sticking. He also told one of the plumbers that he had fastened the valve open. Both of the plumbers testified that with the check-valve open, the overflow from the overloaded main line would have nothing to keep it from backing up into the lines connected with the plaintiff’s house and then into her house. They explained that plaintiff’s house would receive the greatest amount of this overload because it was built on lower ground.

The defendant offered little testimony contradicting the evidence of the plaintiff. A carpenter testified that the main sewer line of the defendant was about one and %oths feet lower than the floor of plaintiff’s house. An employee of the defendant city testified that he had worked as a meter reader and general employee in the Water Department of the City of Holdenville for about 18 years, and in 1962 became Water Superintendent. He testified that during the time he had been with the Water Department they had received many complaints of the overflowing of the mainline, which served the plaintiff’s residence; that in the building of sewers the lines are generally 6 inch lines but as the system develops and more people use the sewers, the 6 inch lines are replaced with 8 inch or even larger lines; that the main line in the alley back of plaintiff’s house which handled the flow of sewage from her house is a 6 inch line and has not been changed or enlarged in 15 years except for the building of a manhole. He related a situation which occurred within two months prior to the trial where the sewage had backed up from the main line into the lines in plaintiff’s back yard. The employee stated that he believed the lines of the defendant were adequate to handle the flow of sewage from the houses where plaintiff’s house was located.

The evidence of the defendant, instead of contradicting the proof of the plaintiff, confirms it.

Defendant contends that the evidence of the plaintiff is insufficient to establish liability against the defendant, citing City of Ada v. Canoy, 198 Okl. 206, 177 P.2d 89, and City of Holdenville v. Moore, Old., 293 P.2d 363, 59 A.L.R.2d 276.

A careful reading of City of Ada v. Canoy, supra, convinces that the case supports the right of the plaintiff to recover. In the opinion this Court said:

“While it is true as contended by defendant that a municipality is not an insurer of its sewer system, and while there is authority to the effect that a city cannot be held liable in damages because of error in judgment as to the size of drains or sewers necessary to carry away sewage or surface waters, it is generally held that if, after such sewers and drains are constructed, it becomes evident that the same as constructed are inadequate to perform the functions contemplated, and after due notice thereof it fails to take steps *525 necessary to remedy such condition and continues thereafter to operate the same in such manner as to constitute a nuisance, it will be held liable.”

The Court further states:

“In such case liability will attach irrespective of the question of negligence on its part.”

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Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 34, 411 P.2d 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-holdenville-v-griggs-okla-1966.