Clark v. Peckham, City Treasurer

9 R.I. 455
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 9 R.I. 455 (Clark v. Peckham, City Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Peckham, City Treasurer, 9 R.I. 455 (R.I. 1870).

Opinion

Brayton, C. J. *

The plaintiff alleges in substance that he has been and is possessed of a wharf estate known as the Dorrance street wharf, and of a dock appurtenant thereto, and of other rights also appurtenant which are not specified. The only appurtenance which he sets out as the basis of any claim, is the dock.

He alleges that by the acts of the defendant, (the city,) he has been unable to use his said wharf and dock to so good advantage as he might otherwise have done, and has lost large rents, profits, wharfage, and income which he might have received, and has been and still is greatly annoyed, disturbed, and incommoded, in the occupation of his said dock and wharf.

The acts of the defendants, by which this injury has been caused, he alleges to be, that they have during all the time of his possession so used and maintained, and wrongfully, a certain drain or sewer, called the “ Dorrance street sewer,” and caused the sewer wrongfully to discharge into said dock dirt, sediment, filth, and other matter in large quantities, that the dock has been greatly filled up and obstructed so that he could not use said wharf and dock as before; that from the matter discharged into said dock have arisen noisome and unwholesome stenches and smells, by which he has been greatly annoyed and incommoded in his occupation of said wharf and dock.

What is now denominated Dorrance street sewer in the plaintiff’s declaration, was originally constructed to carry off the wa *467 ter accumulating in Broad street, at the head of what was then called Dorrance street, to the nuisance of that neighborhood and of the streets. It was made upon the complaint of many people. Upon the report of the standing committee on highways, to whom the complaint was referred, the city council directed the surveyor of highways to cause a suitable culvert to be laid from Broad street through the middle of Dorrance street, to the river. In obedience to this resolution and direction, the so-called sewer was made and has since been maintained.

Upon the trial it was claimed, in defence, that the city was empowered to build and construct sewers within the city, and if injury resulted to individuals in consequence of such construction, the city was not responsible.

Upon this point the judge instructed the jury, that the General Assembly had not expressly granted to the city the right to construct sewers, and that the city had not such power to be implied from, or as incident to, any of the powers granted to the city.

This direction is claimed to be erroneous, and is one of the alleged grounds for a new trial.

We have not been referred to any statute giving to the city any powers, in which the term sewer is used. The counsel, who argued the case, were not agreed as to the legal definition of the word sewer, or what constituted a sewer, and we have not been referred to any case or text book for such definition.

It is defined to be “ A drain or passage to carry off water under ground,” and “ A subterranean canal, particularly in cities.”

The argument of the plaintiff’s counsel against the existence of the power, is based upon what they conceive to be the proper definition of a sewer, what constitutes it, namely, that it is a passage or canal underground by which filthy, corrupt, and offensive matter may run off or may be carried off by water ; and so they concede the power to construct drains to carry off water beneath the surface, while they deny the right to make one which is to carry away matter which is noisome and offensive. They give no authority for such a definition, either in law or philology.

*468 There can be no doubt that there is an implied power in the city, arising from the duties imposed upon it in relation to the streets and highways within its limits, and as incident to the proper discharge of those duties, to construct drains upon the surface of the streets to carry off the water falling upon them, or coming upon them in whatever way, either to prevent their accumulation at points where it would be injurious, or to prevent the waste or washing away of the streets.

The same duties would oftentimes require, and still more frequently render it expedient and proper, to carry it off under ground.

The water, in its passage off, whether upon the surface or beneath it, must necessarily carry along with it the matter thrown or deposited in gutters, and coming upon the surface from travel, — the natural accumulation of a city, all the matter not pure, but of every degree of impurity to the last degree. If noisome and offensive, it would impose upon the city a high duty, to cause it to pass off without being an offence in its passage.

The streets are dedicated to all such necessary uses. It is not, however, to be inferred from this duty or this necessity, that the city may not subject itself to liabilty, if, in making such drains or sewers for the purpose of preventing a nuisance, it creates a public nuisance in another place, and so merely transfers it from one locality to' another. Eor such a drain, creating a public nuisance, the city of Boston was indicted and convicted.

If, then, the city, by means of this drain, either from its improper construction or improper use, have accumulated at this dock, corrupt matter producing noisome and unwholesome stenches, creating there a public nuisance, — if they have, by carting down into the tide water such an accumulation of mud and earth as to interrupt the passage of vessels, there caused a nuisance to navigation, they would be indictable.

An action, however, could not be maintained in favor of an individual, simply because the city might be indicted. He must suffer some peculiar and special damage above that arising to the public generally, to entitle him to sue. If he can prove Such special damage, he is entitled to sue for it.

*469 The right of action as to the injury to a wharf is recognized in Richardson v. City of Boston, 19 How. 263, holding that the plaintiff was entitled to sue if he could prove that the drain in that case had lessened the depth of water at the head of the wharf, where the city did not own the soil.

It was made a point in the argument, that a portion of the land here called Dorranbe street was private property, and not in fact a public street, and so the city had no right to make a sewer through it, and that the city might be liable to the plaintiff, when it would not be were the title in the city. We do not think this can vary the plaintiff’s right, he not being the owner. No one but the owner of the land can sue for any injury caused by building the drain upon it.

The court was requested to charge the jury, that the plat and agreement of the Dorrance Street Association, placed on record by them in 1829, in evidence on the trial, were in legal effect a dedication of the land designated on the plat as Dorrance street to the purposes of a highway ; and the refusal of the court so to charge is claimed to be an error.

The judge held, and so charged, that the agreement and plat were a dedication so far as the lines were actually drawn upon the plat, and no further.

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Related

Richardson v. City of Boston
60 U.S. 263 (Supreme Court, 1857)

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Bluebook (online)
9 R.I. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-peckham-city-treasurer-ri-1870.