City of Sayre v. Rice

1928 OK 499, 269 P. 361, 132 Okla. 95, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 702
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 31, 1928
Docket18343
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1928 OK 499 (City of Sayre v. Rice) 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 Sayre v. Rice, 1928 OK 499, 269 P. 361, 132 Okla. 95, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 702 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

JEFFREY, C.

This action was commenced by Gertrude Rice, as plaintiff, against the city of Sayre, as defendant, in the district court of Beckham county for damages occasioned by the negligent operation of a sanitary sewer system which had its outlet in the vicinity of plaintiff’s home. Defendant filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s original petition which was overruled and defendant answered by general denial to the allegations of negligence and injuries. When the cause was set down for trial defendant filed a motion for a continuance wherein it was stated that the principal annoyance caused plaintiff by noxious odors came from a dumping ground maintained by the city in that vicinity, and that this fact could not be proven except by an absent witness, whose testimony was desired to be obtained. Thereafter plaintiff filed an amended petition, by permission of the court, wherein she. set up three separate causes of action. The first cause of action alleged that the city of Sayre originally established its sewer system to empty into the north fork of Red river below said city, but that sometime about the early part of 1923, the main line of said sewer became broken and that the sewage was discharged out upon the bottom lands of said river in the near vicinity of plaintiff’s land and home, and was negligently permitted to lie upon the -grounds and create a noxious and noisome odor and breed disease germs causing sickness in plaintiff’s family, and by reason thereof plaintiff was unable to retain tenants upon her land and was deprived of rents in the sum of $826 for the years 1923-24-25, and for damages by reason of the discomfort, annoyance, and sickness caused her and her family at their home, and asked for damages in the total sum of $2,325. The second cause of action adopted all the allegations -of the first cause of action and further alleged the negligent maintenance of the dumping ground as stated in defendant's motion for a continuance, the discomfort and annoyance caused plaintiff and her family by said dumping ground together with the sewer. The third cause of action was to a large extent a repetition of the first, which alleged that the condition of the sewer had been called to the attention of the city of-ficals .on numerous occasions, but that they negligently refused to remedy the same; that she presented a bill or claim to said city and that it failed and refused to pay her damages. After the filing of the amended petition plaintiff filed a supplemental petition alleging that the conditions which existed when her original and amended petitions were filed continued to exist during the year 1920, and asked for loss of rents for that year in the sum of $250, and for discomfort and annoyance by reason of the disagreeable odors and disease germs which affected 'the health of her family, in the sum of $750. The cause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $2,000. In response, to special interrogatories propounded, the jury awarded no damages by reason of loss of rents for 1923. the sum of $175 for 1924, and the sum of $205 for the year 1925.

The first assignment of error here pre *97 sented is that the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s original and amended petitions. It is first contended under this assignment of error that the original petition failed to state a cause of action, and the demurrer thereto should have been sustained, under authority of City of Mangum v. Sun Set Field, 73 Okla. 11, 174 Pac. 501. We observe some distinction between the original petition in this case, and that in the case cited; but it is unnecessary to discuss this particular question for the reason that the cause was tried upon the amended petition and the supplement thereto. Defendant contends that the amended petition was also defective to the extent that it showed a permanent injury to the land. According to the petition the sewer system had been installed prior to 1923. In fact it appears from the record that it was installed in 1909. The original action was filed in November, 1925, and asked for damages for 1923-24-25. Defendant contends that, it being a permanent injury, the cause of action arose at the time the sewer system was established, and that the same was barred by the statute of limitation prior to the commencement of the action. With this contention we cannot agree. It is well settled that a nuisance created and maintained by negligent acts, if the same is abatable by an expenditure of either labor or money, and such abatement is consistent with the rightful use and maintenance of the structure by the use. of which the nuisance is created and maintained, is merely a temporary injury and successive actions may be maintained for successive injuries. City of Ardmore v. Orr, 35 Okla. 305, 129 Pac. 867; Pahlka v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 62 Okla. 223, 161 Pac. 544. The petition in the instant case alleged that the main line of sewer in the vicinity of plaintiff’s home became broken and discharged the sewage upon the bottom lands instead of into the water; that this created an unhealthful and annoying condition; that the same was called to the attention of the city officials, but that the city officials negligently permitted the. condition to exist over the period of time covered by the suit. Under the amended petition the allegations showed that the nuisance complained about resulted from the negligence of the. defendant in failing to repair its sewer line, and in permitting the sewage to be discharged upon the ground, all of which was abatable by the expenditure, of money and labor consistent with the rightful and proper use and maintenance of the sewer system. No permanent injury to the land was pleaded, and no permanent or prospective future damage was asked. The injury was not a permanent one, and the cause of action was not barred by the statute of limitations, since the statute begins to run only from the time each successive injury occurs. City of Lawton v. Schwartz, 128 Okla. 42, 261 Pac. 140; City of Lawton v. Johnstone, 92 Okla. 280, 219 Pac. 414; City of Lawton v. Wilson, 127 Okla. 40, 259 Pac. 650.

Defendant again relies on City of Mangum v. Sun Set Field, supra. It was specifically pointed out in that case that the injuries complained of were not alleged to have been the result of negligent construction or operation of the sewer system. In that case the construction of the sewer system and the discharge of the sewage into the stream was alleged to have caused the injury, and it was held that the injury was a permanent one, and that the cause of action arose when the sewer system was constructed, and the water polluted.

Defendant demurred specially to that portion of plaintiff’s first cause of action which asks a recovery of all sums in addition to the rentals alleged to have been lost by reason of said nuisance. It is contended that the allegations of the amended petition are not sufficient to entitle plaintiff to judgment for any other sums than the rentals alleged to have been lost. The amended petition alleges that by reason of the defective sewer .pipe and the discharge of sewage upon the open ground, the same has become a nuisance; that much of the time the stench from said sewage is so powerful and overpowering as to render living at plaintiff’s home almost unbearable, and during the hottest months of the year it became necessary to close all windows and doors in the south of her building to try to keep out said offensive odors from said sewer outlet.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 499, 269 P. 361, 132 Okla. 95, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sayre-v-rice-okla-1928.