City of Lawton v. Wilson

1927 OK 311, 259 P. 650, 127 Okla. 40, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 27, 1927
Docket17615
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1927 OK 311 (City of Lawton v. Wilson) 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 Lawton v. Wilson, 1927 OK 311, 259 P. 650, 127 Okla. 40, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 259 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

LESTER, J.

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

The plaintiff, W. H. Wilson, brought an action against the defendant, city of Lawton, for damages on account of certain alleged acts of negligence on the part of the city.

The plaintiff recovered judgment against the city of Lawton for the sum of $1,615, from which said defendant prosecutes an appeal to this court.

The first proposition presented by the defendant is that the statute of limitations was a bar to the plaintiff’s cause of action.

It appeared that the city of Lawton caused to be erected near Cache creek a septic tank with which to treat the sewage of the city of Lawton. It further appears that the plaintiff was the owner of a certain farm composed of 160 acres and that Cache creek runs across plaintiff’s farm. Plaintiff in his petition alleged that the defendant for 15 years had discharged its sewage in Cache creek in such a manner as to cause the waters in said creek to become polluted; that said waters ran into and across the plaintiff’s farm; and that the said waters when so polluted were rendered unfit for domestic use; that they caused offensive odors and endangered the health of plaintiff and his family.

The plaintiff further alleged:

“That the conditions complained of can be by the city remedied and removed by the use and expenditure of money and labor, that the natural drainage of the country is such that it could easily and properly be carried by drainage pipes through and off of nln úitiff’s land and that said sewaee could be disposed of, causing no harm to any one, by the establishment and operation of a sewage disposal tank or plant.
“That at one time the city did install and operate a sewage disposal plant to treat and dispose of said sewage, but that said city has continuously failed, neglected, and refused to continue its operation, has permitted it to become wholly useless and worthless for said purpose, to become rusty, worn out and dilapidated, and its use has been wholly abandoned for many years last past. That if said sewage disposal plant had been properly handled, kept clean and in repair the conditions herein complained of would not now prevail, and by the installing of a new sewage disposal plant said sewage could be disposed of without injury or damage to plaintiff.”

Defendant filed its answer, in which it alleged, among other things, that:

“For more than two years prior to the filing of the plaintiff’s petition herein had maintained and operated and has ever since maintained and operated with due diligence a septic tank as a part of its sewage system.”

A large number of witnesses testified that as a result of the defendant emptying its sewage into Cache creek the water of said creek which ran in and, across plaintiff's farm was polluted and contaminated; that-it was unfit for any character of domestic use; that it was unsafe for stock to drink from the waters of said creek on plaintiff's farm. Plaintiff testified 'that he could not use the water either for 'his family or his stock, and that he was compelled to supply his family and $tock with water hauled from a long distance. The plaintiff also testified that on account of the condition of said water it had diminished the rental value of his farm in the sum of $750 per year. ,

The question here presented is whether at the time defendant commenced emptying its sewage into Cache creek it constituted a permanent injury to the plaintiff's property, for which only one action could be brought, or whether the defendant’s negligence in the manner in which it emptied its sewage into said creek was such an act of negligence as constituted a severable cause of action.

It appears from the record that the case was tried to the court and jury upon the theory that the defendant was guilty of negligence in the manner" in which it operated its disposal tank, and the plaintiff was confined to the damages, if any, for a period of two years last past prior to the institution of plaintiff’s cause of action.

The plaintiff introduced in evidence the deposition of H. J. Darcey, who qualified *42 as a sanitary engineer. This witness stated that .in the year of 1923 or 1924 he had visited and inspected the sewage disposal plant of the defendant. The testimony of this witness in part is as follows:

'“Q. What were the effects of the sewage as it went out the outlet? A. Well, considerable solid matter came out of the tank from the outlet, but as to the condition of the bottom, you couldn’t tell, because there was possibly two or three feet of water in there at the time. Q. But you say there were solids coming out at the outlet of the sewer where it emptied into Cache creek? A. Yes. Q. What do you mean when you say that sewage was passing through the disposal plant? A. It was going in the inlet end and passing through the tank and out the outlet side. * * * Q. Now, the sewage that was going through the bypass, was that passing through the septic tanks from the disposal plant? A. No, sir. Q. Then the sewage that was going through the by-pass, would that be raw sewage or sewage that had been treated by the disposal plant? A. Raw sewage. Q. From your examination of the disposal plant there at Lawton, just explain in detail how the plant operates when properly functioning? A. The raw sewage entering into the plant flows through, and as the velocity is decreased to that extent it allows the suspended matter to settle to the bottom and the clear or partly clear effluent passes on to the outlet, the solid matter settling out in the bottom requires bacterial decomposition and should later be disposed of by drying on sludge beds. Q. Are there any sludge beds there at that disposal plant at Lawton? A. Not to my knowledge. Q. If the city is operating a plant by using one compartment until that compartment is filled full with sludge, then turning the raw sewage in the compartment that is filled, stand for 30 or 60 days and then washing it out with water through a large hose line and letting the sludge empty into Cache creek through the outlet o~f the disposal plant, is the disposal plant being operated in the proper manner? A. No, sir. Q. How long should the sludge be allowed to stand In one of the compartments of the disposal plant there at Lawton, to properly ripen? A. Approximately six months.”

The city offered in evidence the testimony of John Langwell, who was the superintendent of the water works system of the city of Lawton, and it appears that said witness had superintending control of the sewage disposal plant of the said city, and he testified in part:

“Q. How long do you let the sewage stand there before you wash it out again? A. In the summer time we generally aim to clean it out every 60 days, but in the winter we let it run as long as three months. Q. How do.you clean it out? A. We have the valve pits close to the compartment we are going to clean and we fill that with water and we take the fire hose and cut that up and we keep using this water with the fire hose and open up the valves and let enter Cache creek.”

The testimony as shown by the record Is conclusive on the proposition that solids in large quantities passed from the disposal plant into Cache creek and were carried by said stream across the plaintiff’s farm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 311, 259 P. 650, 127 Okla. 40, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lawton-v-wilson-okla-1927.