Mayor of Savannah v. Cleary

67 Ga. 153
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 67 Ga. 153 (Mayor of Savannah v. Cleary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Savannah v. Cleary, 67 Ga. 153 (Ga. 1881).

Opinion

Speer, Justice.

William Cleary commenced his action for damages against the mayor and aldermen of the city of Savannah, on the 27th day of January, 1874 — the amount claimed being $10,000.00. The suit was for damages sustained from the overflow of his lands and crops by the sewer waters of Bilbo canal, and of Perry street lane canal — two canals used by Savannah for the purpose of draining the city by [155]*155means of sewers emptying into them. Cleary planted two fields adjacent to said canals — one of fifteen acres, north of and next to the Perry canal, the other of eighty acres, east of and next to Bilbo canal. It was alleged that the crops of cotton on the fifteen acre field, and the crop of oats, hay, sweet potatoes, corn, peas and straw on the eighty-acre field, as well as grass for pasturage of cattle (all in fine condition at the time), were totally destroyed by the overflows of said tracts of land by the waters from the said canals — and that the overflows occurred on the following dates, or about then : August 10th and 18th, 1871, and August 5th, 1872. Both fields were inundated with water from the said canals, in the month of August, 1871, and only the fifteen-acre field in August, 1872 — this fifteen acre field having been planted in cotton on both occasions. The declaration alleged that all the overflows were due to the insufficient'banks and bad condition and repair of the Bilbo canal, and of Perry canal; and, also, to the fact that both canals were not kept open and in such condition as to protect the proprietors of adjacent lands, but on the contrary, both canals were stopped up, and so obstructed and kept by obstructions placed therein by the city, that the water brought into the canals from the city sewers could not escape into the Savannah river, as was formerly the case, but was necessarily emptied upon Cleary’s lands adjoining thereto, and overflowed the same. The declaration also alleged that the city was bound to keep said canals in order, so as to protect the lands of the adjacent proprietors from overflow, and so neglected its duty as to unnecessarily cause the damage to plaintiff. The defendants pleaded the general issue; that it was not bound to keep the eastern bank of Bilbo canal in order or repair, so as to prevent overflow of, or damage to, the adjacent lands; also, that the city was not bound to pro. vide good and sufficient banks or dams on said eastern side of said canal, nor was it under any obligation to keep the same in good order or repair,

[156]*156On the trial of the cause, after hearing the evidence and receiving the charge of the court, the jury on returning into court rendered a verdict for plaintiff against the defendant for five thousand and sixty-seven dollars and fifty cents.

The defendant then made a motion for a new trial on the following grounds :

(i.) Because his honor, the judge, erred in charging the jury as follows:

“ It its conceded by the defendants, the mayor and aldermen of the city of Savannah, that the Perry Street Lane canal' and Bilbo canal are controlled by them as a part of the sewerage and drainage system of the city of Savannah, and I charge you that they were required by law to keep such banks or embankments along said canals as would securely keep the waters within the channels of said canals, and to keep them open and in such order as to protect the proprietors of adjacent lands, and they were required to do this in such a manner as to provide against the changes of the weather, which are usual and ordinary at different seasons of the year in this latitude.”

(2.) Because his honor, the judge, erred in charging the jury as follows:

“ I charge you further, if you find from thé. evidence that at the time set forth in the plaintiff’s declaration the defendants had put obstructions in said canals, or had permitted them to become obstrücted by dirt falling in them, and grass and weeds growing up in them, or in any other manner, and that by reason of such obstructions the water overflowed and broke through the banks of said canals, and overflowed the adjacent lands occupied by plaintiff and destroyed his crops growing thereon, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages for the injury and loss that he sustained. And if you find from the evidence that obstructions were put in these canals by defendants to enable them to make repairs thereon, the law of their liability is not changed ; they were bound to so [157]*157conduct and direct these repairs as to protect the proprietors of adjacent lands from damage and injury.”

(3.) Because his honor, the judge, erred in charging the jury as follows:

“ And I charge jmu further, if you find from the evidence that the injury and loss complained of by plaintiff was in no wise caused by the negligence and default of defendants, by reason of the bad repair and condition of said canals, or by reason of obstructions put therein, but was the result of a most extraordinary storm and rainfall; against which human foresight, by the exercise of proper care and precaution, could not provide, and which, by the excessive and extraordinary fall of rain, caused the canals to overflow and submerged the lands occupied by plaintiff, then defendants were not responsible for the injury and loss sustained by plaintiff, and no recovery can be had against them.”

(4.) Because his honor, the judge,, erred in charging the jury as follows :

“ If the city of Savannah so obstructed the canals, or portions of canals it took and used for drainage purposes, and kept their banks in such condition as necessarily to flood the plaintiff’s premises, it is liable for any damages he may thereby have sustained, and the city is not excused by extraordinary rains, if the jury find that the city was originally in fault by closing up said canals and not providing them with sufficient banks, and if such original fault was the proximate or immediate cause of the injury. That I charge you to be the law.”

($.) Because his honor erred in charging the jury as follows:

“ A storm of wind and rain may be of such an extraordinary character and the violence so unprecedented that human skill and foresight could not be proof against it, but in this case here, you must find, in order to find this to be the act of God, you must find it to be such an extraordinary fall of rain, so unprecedented in its character, [158]*158that no human foresight, no care on the part of the city-in constructing and repairing that canal, could have prevented the plaintiff’s land from being submerged.”

(6.) That his honor, the judge, erred in giving a charge to the jury which, as a whole, had a tendency to mislead the jury and give them wrong impressions as to the facts proved, and presented wrong issues to the jury, and failed to present the true issues to the jury. (A full copy of said charges as given being annexed to this motion and marked exhibit A.)

(7.) Because his honor erred in his charge to the jury, in that, in and by said charge he made the liability of the mayor and aldermen of the city of Savannah to the proprietors of -land neighboring on the canals used for drainage purposes that of insurers, and therefore bound to extraordinary diligence, while they were only liable for ordinary diligence in the care and maintenance of said canals.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ga. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-savannah-v-cleary-ga-1881.