Georgia Railway & Power Co. v. Johns

93 S.E. 521, 20 Ga. App. 780, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 1083
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 13, 1917
Docket8077
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 521 (Georgia Railway & Power Co. v. Johns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Railway & Power Co. v. Johns, 93 S.E. 521, 20 Ga. App. 780, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 1083 (Ga. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Luke, J.

The plaintiff’s petition makes the following case: The defendant company owns and operates a hydro-electric generating [781]*781plant on' Tallulah river. Four miles below this plant the Tallulah and Chattooga rivers unite and form the Tugaloo. Four miles down the Tugaloo, eight miles from the defendant’s plant, the plaintiff owns find operates a farm, bordering on the river banks. The company maintains a dam about 100 feet high and about 500 feet long across Tallulah river, where the electric plant is located, which dam forms a storage basin for water, averaging 50 feet deep, 400 yards wide, and three miles long. Eight miles above the plant and across the same river the company has erected another dam of substantially the same dimensions and for the same purpose, but which forms a much larger basin. On October 14 and 15, 1914, heavy rains fell in that community, all the streams were swollen, the plaintiff’s farm was overflowed and his crops, of the value of $1,500, destroyed. That part of the petition designed to show specifically wherein the defendant is liable for the plaintiff’s losses proceeds as follows: “9. The company obstructed the natural flow of the waters of Tallulah river on said date above the farm of petitioner by holding in its dams aforesaid the water collected in said Tallulah river by reason of said rainfall, and collected, stored, and held said waters until about noon of October 15, 1914. 10. The rainfall had been large, and froni noon to three o’clock p. m., October 15, 1914, the river passing the farm of petitioner was filling from the waters of Chattooga river and other streams flowing into Tallulah river below the plant of the company, and into Tugaloo river above the farm of petitioner. 11. About noon, October 15, 1914, the company released from its dams an immense volume of water which it had obstructed in said river, and stored from the rains of the 12 hours previous, and this vast quantity of water rushed down the precipitous Tallulah falls along Tallulah river, and, reaching Tugaloo river, already swollen, quickly overflowed its banks, and the waters of Tugaloo, by reason of this obstructed and stored water suddenly turned loose, overflowed the crops of petitioner,” and thereby caused the injuries specifically set forth.

The brief of the evidence covers 92 pages, approximately 35,000 words, and embraces the testimony of 24 witnesses. -Its nature needs to be indicated here, however, only as to those particulars wherein it is insufficient to prove the plaintiff’s case as laid in his petition, or to support the verdict for $250 which the jury re[782]*782turned in his favor. The plaintiff had operated his farm for 15 years, but the evidence is silent as to how long the company had maintained its dams. The dimensions of the dam at the company’s plant were substantially as alleged in the plaintiff’s petition, except that along the top of the cement dam there was a line of flash-boards, containing a series of gates 6 feet high and 25 feet long and virtually increasing the height of the dam 6 feet if the gates remained closed, but not so if they were opened, because water in the basin could not flow over the top of the cement dam until it had also risen above the top of the closed gates or passed through the open gates. Six of these gates were automatic, the others stationary; that is to say, six of them were so constructed as to be opened by the pressure of high water against them, and to be closed by their own mechanism upon such pressure being removed. They were also designed to open with varying degrees of pressure, or heights of water in the basin, so that all would not open at once, and, after one or more had opened, the others would not open at all unless the surface of the water in the basin continued to rise in spite of the increased flow allowed by the open gate or gates. All the gates were of modern and improved designs. On the day of. the plaintiff’s loss only five of these gates worked automatically, the other being out of order and remaining stationary. The company’s other dam, known as the Mathis dam, 8 miles up-stream from the dam above described, was constructed on a somewhat different plan. The Mathis dam had no gates on top, but had two open sluice gates at the "bottom, in the bed of the river, and other sluice gates higher up in and through the cement dam, the two open gates at the bottom being more than ample to allow the pássage of the river’s normal flow. Aside from the maintenance and construction of these dams, which were necessary to the operation of the business, the company did nothing either to cause or to prevent the injuries for which the plaintiff sues.

As to the volume and duration of the rainfall on the dates in question, the witnesses do not agree; but these apparent conflicts are easily reconciled by reason of the fact that the different witnesses testify as to different times and places, some of the places being several miles apart. All the witnesses, however, do agree upon the one important fact that there was an unusually heavy rainfall, covering all of the watersheds of the Tallulah and the [783]*783■Chattooga rivers on the night of October 14, and on the morning of October 15, the latter being the date of the plaintiff’s injuries. As to the physical facts in point relating directly to the ■dams and the water behind them, there is no material conflict in the-evidence. At 7 o’clock in the morning of October 15 the water stood approximately three feet below the top of the cement part of the dam at the company’s plant, nine feet below the top of the flash-boards; by noon it had risen sufficiently to open one of the automatic gates; during the next hour it had risen sufficiently to open the other four automatic gates that were then in good order; and,, an hour or so later, it was not only pouring through the five open gates, but was also flowing over the top of all the stationary gates, including the so-called automatic gate that failed to open. It was five o’clock p. m. before the water in this basin ceased to rise, the inflow from heavy rains -up-stream being greater in volume than the outpour through and over the gates. At the Mathis dam, where the bottom sluice gates were open, alloying more than a normal flow of the stream, and having no effect whatever on the stream except to partially check the flood, the water in the basin increased from a depth of three to a depth of thirty feet during the same day. The plaintiff testified, that about 2 o’clock p. m., October 15, he observed the waters of the Tugaloo overflowing its banks where that river passed his farm; that the water continued to rise so fast that before darkness' came his farm was overflowed to a depth of 15 feet on the lowest lands; that the water rose from about 2 p. m. to about sunset at a rate between two and three feet to the hour; that ho had many times seen the Tugaloo overflow its banks, both before and since the construction of the company’s dams, but he had never before seen the water rise with such rapidity, or apparently come in waves or cease for a while and then commence to rise again as it did on this occasion, though on other occasions he had seen it rise to a depth of 15 or 20 feet over the low places on the same farm. The normal depth of the river by his farm was from one to three feet, the width of the river-bed 75 yards, and the width of his overflowed bottom lands about a half mile. Other parts of the record material to an understanding of the case will appear in the opinion.

Under the evidence, the jury were not authorized to find that the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injuries was the conduct of [784]*784the defendant as set out in the petition.

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Related

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91 F.2d 811 (Ninth Circuit, 1937)
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258 F. 723 (M.D. Alabama, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 521, 20 Ga. App. 780, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 1083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-railway-power-co-v-johns-gactapp-1917.