New Odorless Sewerage Co. v. Wisdom

70 S.W. 354, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 224, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 S.W. 354 (New Odorless Sewerage Co. v. Wisdom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Odorless Sewerage Co. v. Wisdom, 70 S.W. 354, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 224, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 489 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

This was an action for damages brought by appellees against appellant for polluting the waters of Elm Creek, which flows through appellees’ land. Appellees own a farm of 66 acres, on which they reside, situated on Elm Creek below the city of Gainesville, Texas. Appellant is a corporation engaged in operating a system of sewerage in said city. It owns a sewerage farm on the banks of Elm Creek of about- 30 acres, about three-fourths of a mile above appellees’ premises. It also owns a system of pipes laid in the principal streets of Gainesville, and these pipes connect with public and private houses and receive all the sewerage matter from said houses, and through these pipes the sewerage matter of a large portion of said city is conducted to a large receptacle built on the said sewerage farm.

Appellees allege in their petition that the said sewerage matter is dumped by appellant into Elm Creek and through said creek said sewerage matter reaches their premises; that the waters of said creek have been contaminated and a permanent injury done to their said farm; and they sue for damages for such permanent injury. The petition does not charge appellant with negligence, nor improper construction of its sewerage plant and works, nor with draining any territory not naturally draining into Elm Creek, but treats appellees’ rights as depending purely and simply upon the alleged pollution of the waters of Elm Creek.

Appellant answers by general and special demurrers, by general denial, plea of not guilty, and by special answer. The special answer sets up that appellant has a franchise from the city of Gainesville; that its system of sewerage was built under said franchise at great expense; that appellant used all reasonable care in the construction of its works, which are constructed according to the best known plan, and that appellant is guilty of no negligence; that the sewerage farm is so constructed and arranged that it controls the sewerage matter in appellant’s pipes, and none of such matter falls into Elm Creek;-that Elm Creek is the only natural drainage way for Gainesville, and no territory, not naturally tributary to Elm Creek, drains into appellant’s sewers.

A judgment was rendered on the verdict of a jury for $750, and on appeal we are asked to-revise that judgment.

The record discloses the following facts in substance: The appellee Octavia Wisdom was the owner of a 66-acre farm through a portion of which Elm Creek flowed. The land was worth from $60 to $70 per acre before the sewers were built. The appellant was incorporated under the laws of Texas in 1898, and had a franchise from and contract with the city of Gainesville (which has a population of some 12,000 people) to drain the city of its sewerage for fifty years from 1898. It *226 does so by means of salt vitrified pipes cemented together under the streets and alleys of the city, connected with the houses, and through which the sewage is conveyed to a 30-acre tract of land owned by appellant on the bank of Elm Creek about three-fourths of a mile above appellees’ farm and home, and about a mile and a half below the city of Gainesville, and there deposited in a receptacle dug in the earth, 100 feet long, 12 feet wide, and 12 feet deep, covered over with heavy timbers and earth. From this receptacle a system of loose-jointed perforated pipes extends into the field about three feet from the surface and conveys the overflow water from the cesspool out into the earth, where it is supposed to be filtered and thence carried to the creek through another system of perforated pipes. The solid matter from the sewers remains in the large receptacle, where, as the evidence tends to show, it is consumed by certain bacteria which, the president of the sewerage company says, is propagated by the billions and used for that purpose. The solid matter, he says, never escapes from the receptacle, because the pipes are all screened to prevent it. The evidence of the appellant, in short, was sufficient to establish that the system of sewerage in use by it, not only at Gainesville but at many other cities and towns in Texas, is the result of many years of study and experience, and is as good as can be built in the light of present scientific knowledge on the subject. It seems that the sewerage company did all in its knowledge and power to make it a perfect success and avoid injury to others. On the other hand, the evidence is amply sufficient to prove that the water of Elm Creek was contaminated, polluted, and befouled by the drainage from the sewers to such an extent, at times and often, as to render it unfit for domestic use and very offensive to the smell, even for a quarter of a mile from the creek, and that by reason thereof the appellees’ land was depreciated in value and damaged as much as $750.

Elm Creek flows through a tract of 471 acres of land owned, at the time of the trial, by the honorable district judge who tried this case,— said tract lying adjoining appellees’ tract just below it,—and objection was made at the trial that his honor was therefore interested in the cause, and consequently disqualified to try it. This objection was overruled by the court, and we think properly, because our law provides that the district judge must be “interested in the cause,” etc., m order to disqualify him (Revised Statutes, article 1068), not “interested in the question to be determined,” as would disqualify the judges of the Supreme Court and. Courts of Civil Appeals. Id., arts. 969, 1021.

The main question in this case is raised on the charge given by the court and those requested by appellant and refused. The court’s charge was as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that by permitting the contents of its sewers to enter into Elm Creek the defendant has caused the waters in said creek to become more polluted or impure than it would have been had the defendant’s sewer system not been constructed and operated, and if by reason thereof plaintiffs’ land has been *227 permanently damaged, and if on account thereof its market value has been diminished, then you will find for plaintiff and assess her damages at the difference between the present market value of said land, if any, and what its present market value would be if said sewerage system had not been constructed and operated; but unless you do so find and believe, you will find for defendant.”

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.W. 354, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 224, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-odorless-sewerage-co-v-wisdom-texapp-1902.