Miller & Meyers v. City of Newport News

44 S.E. 712, 101 Va. 432, 1903 Va. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 712 (Miller & Meyers v. City of Newport News) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller & Meyers v. City of Newport News, 44 S.E. 712, 101 Va. 432, 1903 Va. LEXIS 49 (Va. 1903).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in error are the joint owners of five vacant lots situated in the city of Newport News, fronting on Twenty-fifth street, and brought their action to recover damages of the city because of the condition in which it is alleged their lots are kept by reason of a certain ditch or drain which goes over them and empties into Newport News creek.

This action is based upon the theory that (1) the city, by artificial means and channels, collected the surface water along its streets and avenues, and poured the same upon the lots in question; (2) that, granting that some of this surface water would voluntarily go on the lots, the defendant city had largely and injuriously added to this amount, so that there is always a [434]*434stream flowing over these lots, and an entirely different stream from that originally passing through the said ditch or drain, in that it is now filthy and unhealthy, and entirely destroys the use of the lots; or (3) that the said ditch or drain is maintained so as to be a nuisance, rendering said lots uninhabitable.

The action is defended on the ground that the nuisance complained of was not created by the city, but the ditch or drain is, and always was, a natural water course, and was not cut, constructed, or altered or used by the city.

The proceedings in the Circuit Court resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant city, which we are asked to review and reverse upon the grounds (1) that the verdict and judgment are contrary to the law and the evidence; and (2) the court misdirected the jury by the giving of certain instructions for the defendant city, and the refusal of two instructions asked for by the plaintiffs.

It appears that the city of Newport News was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly, approved January 16, 1896. (Acts 1895-’96, p. 74, c. 64.) Miller, one of the plaintiffs in error, acquired the five lots in question in 1897, and conveyed one-half interest therein to Meyers, his co-plaintiff in error, in September, 1898. The city is divided by the tracks and yard' of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, and in the fall of 1899 the city built a bridge over the railway tracks and yard in Twenty-fifth street, one end of which bridge is very near plaintiffs in error’s lots, and this fact increased their value enormously, as is conceded. The lots were, at the time they were bought by plaintiffs in error, and still are, 9 or 10 feet below the grade of Twenty-fifth street and Warwick avenue; in fact, they are very low lots, and from the formation of the land the natural surface drainage of a part of the city is through the drain across Warwick avenue and .Twenty-sixth street, over the lots of the Old Dominion Land Company to the lots of plaintiffs in error, thence into Newport News creek; [435]*435and the city has reduced the amount of territory drained through this natural outlet by the construction of the approaches to Twenty-fifth and Thirty-fourth street bridges. Ho city property or city sewers drain through this outlet, as admitted by plaintiff in error Miller testifying in his own behalf; and the filthy and unsanitary matter which is conveyed by this natural drain across these lots comes either from private property or from the streets, some of which are paved and others not paved. The ditches made on the sides of the streets that plaintiffs in error complain'of were caused by the working of the streets and turning the water from the middle to the sides. The lots of plaintiffs in error are in the same condition they were at the time they were purchased, and the city has exercised no ownership or control over this natural water course through the lots. Plaintiffs in error’s witness, Lentz, states that the ditch or drain which runs across these lots is a natural water course, and has been since he came to the city in 1885, and in fact, he says, “That ditch has been there since the day of Adam,” meaning thereby to say that from the lay of the land the natural flow of the water has always been through this outlet; and this fact is testified to by á number of witnesses examined on behalf of the city.

Upon this evidence before the jury, clearly their verdict should not be disturbed, unless the Circuit Court has erred in giving or refusing instructions.

In submitting the case to the jury the court gave four instructions asked by plaintiffs in error and a like number asked for by the defendant. Exceptions are taken to the refusal of the court to give instructions numbered 1 and 4 asked by the plaintiffs in error, and to the giving of the four instructions asked by the defendant.

By instruction Ho. 1 the court was asked to tell the jury’ that a city is liable for failure to exercise its legislative and discretionary power to abate or remove a public nuisance, whether [436]*436caused by itself or private parties. The instruction was properly refused, as there was no evidence tending to show that, if a nuisance existed upon the lots of plaintiffs in error, it was caused by the defendant. The case here is very unlike the case of Chalkley v. City of Richmond, 88 Va. 402, 14 S. E. 339, 29 Am St. Rep. 730, so much relied on by plaintiffs in error. In that case water from the James river was diverted from its natural course through an artificial sewer constructed by a third person, and afterwards, repaired and controlled by the city in one of its streets, and was allowed to flood the plaintiff’s cellar.

Where one constructs a sewer on his premises, and through it discharges filth and garbage into the street, creating a nuisance, to the injury of an adjacent lot owner, no action lies in favor of such adjacent owner against the city for failure to provide a sewer or for a failure to abate the nuisance, his remedy being against the person offending for maintaining a nuisance. The mere fact that a nuisance exists, and has occasioned an injury to the third person, does not render the corporation liable, provided the nuisance was not created or maintained by the corporation itself. Chattanooga v. Reid, 103 Tenn. 616, 53 S. W. 937.

The failure of a city to exercise its. charter power to abate nuisances not rendering its streets unsafe does not give persons injured by such failure a private action against the city, nor does a failure to make or enforce ordinances prohibiting nuisances give them such action against the city. 2 Dill. Munc. Corp., sec. 851; Jones v. Williamsburg, 97 Va. 722, 34 S. E. 883, 47 L. R. A. 294; Cain v. Syracuse, 95 N. Y. 83.

In Robinson v. City of Danville, ante, p. 213, 43 S. E. 337, it is held that where a culvert erected under a railroad was subsequently extended by the city across a street, but neither the city nor any municipal body of the town before incorporation had ever 'passed any resolution concerning the culvert. [437]*437or in any way had. assumed control over the same, the city was not liable to a property-owner for damages from its obstruction.

Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 712, 101 Va. 432, 1903 Va. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-meyers-v-city-of-newport-news-va-1903.