Damour v. Lyons City

44 Iowa 276
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 4, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 44 Iowa 276 (Damour v. Lyons City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Damour v. Lyons City, 44 Iowa 276 (iowa 1876).

Opinion

Day, J.

I. Appellant insists that the facts proven on the trial do not sustain the verdict. It is claimed that, whilst plaintiff testifies that he sustained certain losses in 1872, it does not appear in his own testimony, or that of any one else, that these losses are attributable to the acts of defendant. The plaintiff, however, does testify that he sustained losses in June, 187J, on account of the negligent acts of defendant, amounting to more than the verdict. It must be presumed that the jury assessed these damages on account of the losses which the testimony charges upon defendant. It is not shown that they allowed anything for the losses of 1872.

i. municipal obstnictíons' 1X1 Stl'66Ü * grade. ' II. It is, claimed that the plaintiff’s own negligence contributed to the injury; that whilst he was building his house his attention was called to,the fact that he was building it too low. But the evidence nowhere ^ shows that the house was, in fact, too low. He certainly had a right to conform his building to the established grade of the street. He had a right to suppose, either that the city would not permit an embankment to remain in the street above the established grade, or that the city would, by the construction of proper culverts, prevent the embankment from impeding the flow of accumulating and. surface water. He built- his cellar wall twenty-one inches, and the floor of his house thirty inches, above the grade of the street. There is no testimony in the case that this was not sufficiently high.

2_._. negligence, III. It is claimed, however,1 that he was guilty of negligence in storing sugar and other groceries in his cellar, knowing that it was liable to be inundated. The plaintiff’s building was used for a store. He had a right to make a reasonable use of his own premises in such way as would prove most profitable to him. The defendant has no right by its wrongful act to deprive him of the use of his property. He could not be required to forego the enjoy[279]*279ment of his cellar throughout the year, because the wrongful or negligent act of defendant had placed it in a position that its use might be attended with loss.

8 _._. evidence. IY. The plaintiff’s amended petition alleges that the defendant at divers times since January, 1870, has undertaken to provide for the drainage of the surface water, which of long time and by reason of the lay of the ground flowed down from the high ground three or four blocks west of Sixth street, along Eandolph, Commercial, Park and Mansion streets eastward toward the Mississippi, and that in so undertaking it conducted the water, so naturally flowing eastward on Park street, past the south side of the premises of plaintiff, northward along the west side of sixth street, and in order to make the water flow down said west side of sixth street, the defendant excavated a deep gutter or ditch in front of plaintiff’s premises, etc.

The plaintiff asked a witness the following question:

“State to the jury what streets, west and north, the city has' worked upon attempting to control the water which flows from these streets, and courses past and upon the premises of plaintiff?” The defendant objected to the question for the reason that by the pleadings the plaintiff makes no claim against the city for any neglect, except neglect in construction of a gutter on Sixth street. The objection was overruled, and the action is assigned as error. The question is pertinent and proper. The complaint of plaintiff in part is that the city, by its improvements of the streets diverted the natural course of the surface water, fthd caused it to flow past the premises of plaintiff without providing for its outlet sufficient culverts. It was competent to prove that the city had constructed gutters in the locality in question, for the purpose of showing that the surface water had been diverted past plaintiff- ’s premises.

4. —:-: way?1 ml~ Y. The court, in substance, instructed that the fact' that the embankment was constructed by, and for the use of the Clinton and Lyons Horse Eailroad Company, will not defeat the plaintiff’s recovery in this action, for it is immaterial as regards plaintiff’s right of recovery [280]*280against defendant, whether said embankment was constructed by, and for the use in whole or in part of said railroad company, or whether it was constructed by defendant, for the use of the public as a street or highway The court refused to instruct at the instance of defendant, that if defendant was acting under a special charter, which gave it no power to authorize the construction of a street railway, at the time the same was constructed, any such authority granted by it would be without the scope of its corporate powers, and would create no liability against defendant. This action of the court appellant assigned as error. Appellant contends that unless the charter expressly confers authority to authorize a street railway, or it be necessary to the proper exercise of the powers expressly conferred, a city has no authority to grant, by ordinance, permission to construct a street railway.

Appellant cites and relies upon Davis v. The Mayor of New York, 14 N. Y., 506. Whatever may be the law elsewhere, it must be regarded as the doctrine of this State, that a city may authorize the construction of a railway in its streets. This was determined in Slatten v. The City of Des Moines, 29 Iowa, 148, without any reference to any special provision of the charter conferring such authority. In Dillon on Municipal Corporations, section 570, it is said: “ The usual extensive powers conferred upon municipal corporations to improve and control streets, and regulate their use will, it is believed, ordinarily authorize them to use or permit the use of streets for horse railways, provided they do not surrender or abdicate their legislative and police powers and functions with respect to the streets, and the persons or corporations thus licensed to use them.” The court did not err in the action complained qf.

VI. Appellant complains of the giving of the following instruction:

If said embankment was raised above the established grade of the street, it was an obstruction for which the defendant is responsible, though it did not directly create or make the obstruction or authorize it to be done, and if said embankment was and is, an obstruction to the natural flow of water upon and across said street, and causes the water to dam up [281]*281and flow back upon the adjacent premises to the injury of the' owner, for such injury the defendant is liable, if at the time of the injury the premises were as high as the grade of the street, and if the defendant in grading and working its streets obstructs the natural flow of surface water, and by reason of its failure to provide necessary channels for carrying off the water, it is caused to flow in increased quantities upon the adjacent premises to the injury of the owner, for such injury the defendant is liable if no fault of the owner contributed thereto.”

5. —,:-: fact. It is objected that this is an instruction on a matter of fact as contra-distinguished from law; that it was not competent for the court to say that if the embankment was raised above the established grade of the street it was an obstruction/ that whether or not it was an obstruction was a question of fact for the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Iowa 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damour-v-lyons-city-iowa-1876.