Harbison v. City of Hillsboro

204 P. 613, 103 Or. 257, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 150
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 204 P. 613 (Harbison v. City of Hillsboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harbison v. City of Hillsboro, 204 P. 613, 103 Or. 257, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 150 (Or. 1922).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

— At the close of plaintiffs’ case the defendant moved for a nonsuit on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence to justify submitting the case to the jury, in that plaintiffs’ right to use the ditch and flow waters over the Corrieri lands was but a mere license, subject to such use as might be made by the owner of the Corrieri land and his grantee; that if the use of the ditch or lands of Corrieri by Corrieri, or another by his permission, interfered with plaintiffs’ use, such use constituted a revocation of the license in so far as such use interfered with plaintiffs’ enjoyment of the privilege; that plaintiffs had not proved a grant or easement; and that the damage, if any, had been caused from surface waters. The motion was denied. At the close of the case defendant asked for a directed verdict for defendant, which was denied.

Practically the same questions were raised by requested instructions by defendant, which read as follows:

No. 3. “Plaintiffs are not entitled to recover damages, if any, from the City of Hillsboro resulting by reason of the surface and spring waters not draining from their land, caused by some act of the defendant committed upon Corrieri iands, unless plaintiffs themselves, or their predecessors, paid to the owner of the Corrieri lands some consideration or did some act in connection with said ditch of material benefit to the owner of the Corrieri lands before the city acquired [265]*265a right, if yon find it did acquire a right, to use said ditch and overflow the Corrieri lands.”
No. 4. “Corrieri, as the owner of the land known as the Corrieri tract, had a legal right to permit the City of Hillsboro to use the ditch on his lands and to overflow his lands and to deposit sewage thereon, and if such use by the city of Hillsboro interferes with the drainage of surface and spring waters from the Harbison lands, resulting in damages to the Harbison lands, or crops, plaintiffs cannot complain in this action and cannot recover from the city unless plaintiffs or their predecessors, paid to the owner of the Corrieri lands some consideration for the use of said ditch, or some material benefit resulted to the owner of the Corrieri lands from the ditch constructed by plaintiffs’ predecessors, before the city acquired a right to use the ditch and overflow the Corrieri lands.”
No. 12. “ * * If you find that plaintiffs have a right to the use of the ditch on the Corrieri lands, that right would not prevent Corrieri from receiving water and sewage from the City of Hillsboro and overflowing his lands, provided such water and sewage did not interfere with plaintiffs’ right in said ditch, but if Corrieri received said water and sewage from the city, and was to control the same, and permitted the same to flow into the ditch of plaintiffs, or in which they had a right, to their injury, Corrieri, and not the city, would be liable.”

The charge given by the court to the jury read in part thus:

“I instruct you that the owner of lands is entitled to have and enjoy for the benefit of his lands, unobstructed, the natural drainage facilities thereof, not only upon his property but upon other property adjoining and contiguous. In other words, an adjoining owner or one owning lands below, across which the natural course or direction of drainage exists naturally, or any other person, has no right to obstruct or hinder the natural drainage so as to injure or damage [266]*266the owner of such lands; such right is a natural one and appurtenant to the land. And I wish you to hear this suggestion in mind during all of the instructions I shall give you upon the subject of ditches and drainage. ’ ’

After instructing the jury at length the court summarized as follows:

“The City of Hillsboro has no right to deposit upon the lands of Corrieri in said ditch, or contiguous thereto, so it will run into said ditch, sewage from its sewers so as to obstruct the rights of plaintiffs, provided that the owners of said lands upon which such ditch is constructed, constructed the ditch upon the natural course and direction of the drainage of such lands affected by the ditch, or if the ditch was constructed in a direction or course which was not the natural course or direction of the drainage of the lands affected by the ditch but that the ditch was constructed by plaintiffs’ predecessor in title under an agreement and by payment of a consideration for the right to, or the owner of the Corrieri lands, at the time of its construction, received some substantial benefit from the construction and maintenance thereof, the defendant would not have the right to use such ditch in such manner as to obstruct the drainage system of the plaintiffs so as to cause them injury or damage; but if constructed not in the natural course of drainage hy permission of the owner, without payment of a consideration therefor, or without its construction resulting in a substantial or material benefit to the owner of the lands, it would be a mere license and revocable and not assignable, and it was such that the defendant would'have a right, under the authority • of the owner of the Corrieri lands, to deposit its sewage thereon and therein without being liable in damages to the plaintiffs; but the plaintiffs wpuld have no right, in this case, to complain of any use made by the City of Hillsboro of the Corrieri lands, or the ditch on and below the same, unless such use interfered with some legal right of the plaintiffs such as [267]*267is necessary for yon to find existed in plaintiffs under the rules I have given you. ’ ’

1. The contents of the charge of the court to the jury which we have quoted discloses that the substance of the requested instructions Nos. 3 and 4, was included in the charge, so that defendant cannot complain in that regard.

2. Bequest No. 12 would shift the responsibility for the care of the water and sewage from the city sewer, from the municipality to Corrieri for the reason that under certain conditions he agreed to keep the ditch in repair.

The City of Hillsboro is authorized by its charter (Section 36) to raise money for the construction, maintenance and repair of sewers. After the construction of its sewer system, the duty as to the control, use and repair of the system is purely ministerial. The city having assumed the control and management of the sewer and drain, was bound to use reasonable diligence and care to keep such sewer and drain in good repair, and is liable in damages to any property injured by its failure in this respect: 9 R. C. L., p. 670, §§ 62, 63. This corporate duty imposed upon the city cannot be avoided and cast upon Corrieri or anyone else: Hosford Transp. Co. v. Portland, 70 Or. 366 (141 Pac. 1016). For this reason requested instruction No. 12 was properly refused

3. The attempted arrangement with Corrieri in regard to clearing out the ditch in so far as it affects this case, stands on no different footing than if anyone else had agreed with the city to do such work and failed. The City of Hillsboro is liable for wrongfully permitting water to flow from its sewers upon abutting property, causing damage thereto, or for [268]*268damage from sewage which percolates to private property from its sewer.

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Bluebook (online)
204 P. 613, 103 Or. 257, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbison-v-city-of-hillsboro-or-1922.