Norwalk (City) v. Blatz

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 306, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 417
CourtHuron Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 306 (Norwalk (City) v. Blatz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norwalk (City) v. Blatz, 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 306, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 417 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

The action in the court- below was by Frances Blatz against the city of Norwalk. In her petition, she set forth that she was the owner of a tract of land of about seven acres in -the suburbs of the city; that she had been the owner of this land for more than six years, and that over and across this land from time immemorial there had been and then was a natural water course, and until the action upon the part of the city of which she complains, this water course supplied the land with pure and wholesome water sufficient in quantity and quality for all domestic and agricultural purposes. She charges that the defendant has constructed, or caused to be constructed, sewers’in, through and along many of the streets and avenues of said city, — naming them, —and that without any right or authority the city made this water course the outlet for these sewers, and that these sewers carry away from the city the contents of privy vaults and all sorts of offal such as usually go into sewers. She also says that the city has so constructed its drains' and sewers as to throw down-upon these premises and into this water course a greater quantity of water than would naturally flow there, and that this has resulted, in times of freshet, in floods that have carried away [307]*307bridges upon her premises overspanning this water course, and has resulted in washing away the soil, and in widening the channel, whereby a part of her land has been permanently lost to her. And she says that the offensive matter that has been brought down in the sewers has been thrown upon her lands, destroying the herbage; thát the air has been contaminated and made foul-smelling, disagreeable and unhealthful, and her land rendered unfit for occupancy for dwelling purposes, and for farming and grazing, and that these wrongs have continued during the period of six years next prior to the beginning of the action; and for ■these wrongs she claims damages in the sum of $1,500.

The city denies that it has committed these wrongs, and denies that it has east any more water upon her premises than naturally would flow there; but the city goes further and claims that even if it has by sewers or drains, carried down any more water than would naturally flow upon the premises, it has exercised this right for such a period of time, exceeding twenty-one years, under claim of right, that it has acquired the absolute right to do it, and that the plaintiff has no longer any right to object to or oppose it. This is denied by the plaintiff.

The case was submitted to a jury which brought in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff below for $300. The city filed a motion for a new trial upon various grounds, which motion was overruled; and in its petition in error here it sets forth the various grounds upon which it claims this judgment should be reversed; but in the brief filed by counsel for plaintiff in error the grounds really relied upon are stated, and in discussing the cases, we will follow those assignments of error. They are five in number, and the fourth and fifth we may as well dismiss at once. The fourth is:

“The court erred in the admission and rejection of testimony.”

We find no error in this respect, unless such' as may be covered by another assignment of error involving the subject of the statute of limitations; and that subject will be discussed further on and will not be given attention under this assignment.

Fifth. “The attorney for the plaintiff was guilty of misconduct in his final argument to the jury, as stated in the affidavits filed in support of the motion for new trial.”

We do not find that the affidavits have been made part of the bill of exceptions; therefore, they cannot be considered; and nothing on the subject is otherwise shown.

Going back to the first:

“The verdict of the jury was against the weight of the evidence concerning the right of the city by prescription to maintain its sewage across the premises in question.”

[308]*308We are not prepared to say that that is so as to the sewage; but it seems clear to us that as to the alleged flooding of the premises by an excessive quantity of water, which was one of the matters submitted to the jury, and presumably one of the things taken into consideration in making up their verdict, the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. That is to say, the casting of water upon these premises in the quantities shown has been continued by the city for so long a period that it has acquired a right to this use, and the land has become subject to this servitude; and this requires a reversal of the judgment; for we cannot tell how iquch of the $300 was allowed on this account, or how much upon the claim which the evidence supports.

A part of the damage was claimed for the washing of the banks and a part for the washing away of bridges. If the city acquired a right to carry down that quantity of water, then the plaintiff’s land was subject to all the natural consequences of the water flowing thereon, and if it washed away some of the banks, or if it carried away bridges that were not constructed so as to withstand floods, that would be one of the burdens the servient land would have to bear; so it follows (since we have found that the verdict as to the right' of the city to convey water down in that way was against the weight of the evidence) that so much of the verdict as is founded upon the loss of bridges and the loss of soil and washing away of the soil is unsupported by the evidence.

, The second assignment is: “ That the verdict of the jury was excessive and could not have been arrived at in any legitimate way, and was. evidently the result of passion and prejudice.”

We find that it was probably excessive on account of the jury adopting such wrong basis for its estimate of the damages, but not because of any passion or prejudice apparent in the record.

One of the questions much debated and apparently carefully considered by the trial judge was as to the statute of limitations applicable to these claims, and to certain elements of damage; and, a retrial being probable, we deem it expedient to discuss this question.

The plaintiff in error complains of the refusal of the court to charge upon this subject as requested, and of the charge as given. The requests refused on account of which complaint is made, are numbers 12 and 17; number 12 reads:

“You should in no case, even if you find for the plaintiff, award any damages for the claimed washing away of bridges, or parts of bridges, which occurred before four years next preceding the beginning of this action. ’ ’

That was refused; number 17 reads:

[309]*309“In no case is the plaintiff entitled to damage against the defendant on account of the washing away of the banks of the stream or water course in question, which occurred prior to June 19, 1897.”

That would carry it back of the period of four years, and that was refused.

The court charged the jury upon this subject as follows:

“The injuries alleged by -the plaintiff are of two classes — those of a temporary character affecting, as claimed, the value of the use of the premises owned by the plaintiff, and those more permanent in their nature and alleged to have affected permanently the value, of said premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 306, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norwalk-city-v-blatz-ohcircthuron-1906.