Platter v. City of Des Moines

21 N.W.2d 787, 237 Iowa 348, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1946
DocketNo. 46806.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 787 (Platter v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platter v. City of Des Moines, 21 N.W.2d 787, 237 Iowa 348, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 288 (iowa 1946).

Opinion

Smith, J.

On May 24, 1944, plaintiff and bis family lived on approximately one hundred acres of rented farm land located between the railroad tracks to the north and the Raccoon River to the south in the city of Des Moines. His residence address was 1304 Market Street. He had lived there about six years. For convenience we will refer to the prem *350 ises as if they were bis. The land there lies in a bend of the river, which comes from the west and at about the Eighteenth Street bridge west of plaintiff’s premises makes a wide sweep south and then east. Plaintiff’s buildings and about seventy or seventy-five acres of his land were inside of what Is called the levee built within the river bend. This levee is distant sixty or eighty rods from the buildings at the nearest point. It begins near the Eighteenth Street bridge, thence extends southerly, then curves southeasterly, finally, turning north and running to the railroad tracks at a point some distance east of plaintiff’s premises.

His buildings consisted of a house, barn, chicken house, brooder house, corncribs, milkhouse, and cave. He had some dairy cattle, milked eight cows, and had fifteen or sixteen head of young stuff. He also had about forty hogs and an undisclosed number of chickens.

A sewer line extended from the west, easterly along the south side of the railroad tracks north of plaintiff’s premises, and on May 24, 1944, this sewer broke at a point about forty rods north and slightly west of plaintiff’s buildings. The land within the enclosure of the levee is not flat but varies in elevation as much as twenty feet, being lower in some places than around plaintiff’s buildings.

From the break in the sewer line water shot up ten or twelve feet high. The lower places filled first. For a week or ten days the land was flooded and the water got deep enough to surround plaintiff’s house and be under the floor; it filled his cave and ran into the chicken house about six inches deep. He had to raise the brooder house and take his young chickens to his brother-in-law’s place and put the old hens up in the haymow. ■ He took some of his hogs to Camp Dodge and turned them on pasture and the sows with pigs he put “over on the dump in hog houses” on higher ground. He moved his milk cows to his brother-in-law’s and put his stock cattle on pasture at Camp Dodge. His brother-in-law lived three miles west of Johnston Station- — the record does not show how far from plaintiff’s home. They had to pull his stuff out with a tractor and pulley. The water reached its highest peak when about three feet deep over Market Street.

*351 About when the water was coming up around the house plaintiff went to the city hall to complain but received little attention. The record does not clearly show with whom he talked. The water went down something like ten days after it had first broken out. Plaintiff and his witnesses could then see the place where the water came out of the sewer. One says it rose about six or seven days and then started to go down and must have taken seven or eight days to go down.

At that point there was a manhole casing built up from the sewer and projecting several feet above ground with a manhole cover on top. The break was in the side of this casing at about the ground level. The wall of the easing at that point appeared to be about eight inches thick. One witness estimates it as a foot thick. It was made of brick and mortar — “some sand, lime, a little cement, water, mixed up to harden between the brick.” One witness says it was “good material” and explained that mortar with a little cement will hold better than with all cement, or with all mortar and no cement.

The hole in the casing where the water came out was from eight inches to a foot square. The lower edge was slightly below and the upper edge above the level of the ground. The hole was not round and the edges smooth, but looked as if bricks were shoved out. The manhole cover was still on top but plaintiff did not know whether fastened down or not. The hole in the side was approximately one and a half or two feet below the cover. Plaintiff says at the place where the chunk was broken out “the construction looked pretty good.”

When plaintiff looked down into the hole there was not any water either going into it from the outside or coming out from the inside. From the hole down to the top of the water in the sewer line, as plaintiff looked into it, appeared to be about six feet. This hole was the only break in the sewer any of the witnesses could observe.

About the middle of June (one witness says “around the 9th”) the water started coming out again and flooded the lands about the same place as before, all the water coming out of this same hole. Before the first flood came plaintiff had planted about fifteen acres in corn and he had alfalfa and brome grass *352 planted in about three acres in the hog lot. After the first waters went down part of this ground was prepared again. Plaintiff had just disked ten acres a couple of times and gotten it ready to plant when the water came up a second time. After the second flood subsided it was the first part of July. Plaintiff then planted seven or eight acres of sweet corn and a little sorgo corn for seed. All he finally realized from these efforts was about two acres of unmatured sorgo that made feed but no crop and no pasture. He later brought the hogs and chickens back, but not the cattle: “There wasn’t anything there for them to eat.”

Plaintiff and his witnesses describe the sediment that was spread around by the flood as looking like “raw sewage,” with offensive, rotten odors that continued for a month “or better ’ ’ after the last of the water went down. The City Health Department condemned the wells and posted signs. “We got city water put in there along in the fall.”

The foregoing is a summary of the testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses. Further details will be referred to as we discuss the propositions of law involved.

Appellant in argument bases his claimed right of action upon three propositions: 1. Appellee city was negligent in failing to maintain the sewer so as to avoid breaking by pressure from within. 2. After the sewer line broke and appellee city had notice thereof the city was negligent in failing to repair same promptly so as to protect against the subsequent flood. 3. The result of the floods constituted a nuisance, causing damage for which the city was liable.

The city relies for affirmance upon these several propositions : 1. Appellant failed to show anjr negligence in construction or maintenance; failed to show the existence of a nuisance; or any act or omission of the city constituting a proximate cause of the sewer’s breaking. 2. Appellant failed to show there was reasonable opportunity to repair the sewer break between the two floods. 3. Appellant’s proof of damages was wholly conjectural and uncertain.

The trial court, at the close of appellant’s evidence, found: That appellant’s evidence failed to show any negligent act or omission to act which could be the proximate cause of the *353

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 787, 237 Iowa 348, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platter-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1946.