Roscoe v. City of Everett

239 P. 831, 136 Wash. 295, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1032
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1925
DocketNo. 19276. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 239 P. 831 (Roscoe v. City of Everett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roscoe v. City of Everett, 239 P. 831, 136 Wash. 295, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1032 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Askren, J.

— Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for herself and for the benefit of her minor child on account of the death of her husband, alleged to have been caused by drinking polluted water furnished by the city of Everett. From a judgment rendered upon the verdict of the jury in favor of plaintiff, tliQ defendant has appealed. Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence.

This case involves many of the same facts as are detailed in Aronson v. Everett, post, p. 312, 239 Pac. 1011, whereby polluted water was permitted to pass into the city mainp through a by-pass connection at the Eclipse Mill Company’s plant. For the sake of brevity many of the facts detailed in that opinion will not be repeated here. It is sufficient to say that the evidence discloses that, on April 11,1923, a six-inch main was laid to connect two laterals, and that, when the connection was so *297 made, it permitted free circulation of water to the city users in the district served, and also a better service to the Eclipse Mill Company. At the time this connection was made, there was a by-pass which had existed for a great many years. With the making of the connection there was no longer any need for the by-pass. This by-pass had in it what is known as gate valve “A,” a valve worked by hand, and which when closed effectually prevented water from passing through the pipe.

It was the contention of the city that, when the connection was made, this valve was closed, and that representatives of the mill company were advised of the danger and promised to remove the by-pass. There is a very sharp conflict in the testimony, the representatives of the mill company denying that they were ever notified that it was dangerous to have this valve open; denying that it was closed or had been kept closed for many years past, and further denying that they either promised to keep the valve closed or to remove it. There was also very sharp conflict in the testimony as to complaints made to city authorities. There is abundant testimony from which the jury had a right to find that complaints were made to the city long before any action was taken to remedy the defect. Appellant’s own witness admitted that while gate valve “A,” if kept closed, was an effectual way of preventing the passage of water, since it was the only obstruction preventing the passage of water from the mill company’s main to and into the city mains, and since the water of the mill company came from the Snohomish river, a polluted source, it was dangerous to leave such a by-pass at the point in question. It is true that the city mains usually carried a higher pressure than the mill company’s mains; but this varied *298 owing to the changing operations in the mill, and to the increased nse of city water in the summertime.

There was also evidence that the city never inspected the valve in the by-pass from the date of its installation of the new main on April 11, until the 25th day of July, 1923; that no effort was made during that time to determine whether it was closed, or to determine if it had been removed by the mill company. The situation here is not parallel with those cases where the chance of pollution is small and incidental, as, for instance, where a city watershed covers a great deal of territory and constant policing would he required to prevent any contamination. In this case the city permitted water taken from a point close to where city sewers emptied into the river to be pumped into a line which was physically connected with all the users in the district. Nothing but the closed gate valve could prevent the polluted water reaching the consumers. The ease with which the valve could be sealed or the bypass removed, and the imminent danger to be apprehended by failure so to do, are strong factors in the question of the city’s negligence. It thus became a question of fact for the jury to determine, in the light of all the evidence in the case, whether or not the city was negligent in leaving this by-pass with the gate valve; whether it was negligent in its failure to inspect at any time thereafter, and whether it was negligent for failure to ascertain and remedy the condition of the polluted water after notice had been given it. The court did not err in submitting this question to the jury. Castner v. Tacoma Gas & Fuel Co., 123 Wash. 236, 212 Pac. 283.

Some contention is made by appellant that notices were given to the health inspector, and that such notice should not be construed to be notice to the city as far as the water department was concerned. It seems to *299 us that complaints made to the health department were at least some notice to the city, for the complaints were made to the particular officers of the city selected to handle matters relating to the public health, and who were qualified to determine the city’s course of action. Indeed, it might well be said that the health officer would be far better qualified to act upon such information than an officer of the water department whose knowledge might be confined to the physical construction of the plant rather than to the matter of precautions necessary to be taken to secure immunity from pollution. But the question more clearly is whether, considering the necessarily close relationship between the city health department and the purity of water furnished by the city to its users, it can be found that notice reached the responsible authorities of the water department. In any event, however, the evidence showed the polluted condition of the water for a sufficient length of time to make it a question for the jury as to constructive, if not actual, notice to the city.

Objection is made to an instruction given by the court in which four different grounds of negligence based upon the complaint are set out. One of them had to do with the question of the manner or method of construction of the connection between the city system and the Eclipse Mill Company’s plant. Appellant insists that the evidence in the case does not uphold the allegation of the complaint that there was faulty construction, and that therefore no instruction should have been given upon this point. It may be that this instruction, read strictly in connection with the testimony of the witness Carver that there was nothing wrong with the method of construction, is subject to the objection appellant makes; but we think that, taken together with all the evidence in the case, it must have been intended by the court, and under *300 stood by tbe jury, to have had reference to the making of the connection of the 34th Street line, and leaving the by-pass, in which there was a gate valve, unguarded and unprotected. There was testimony to the effect that the gate valve should have been either sealed to prevent its being opened, or that it should have been protected so that no one could get at it, or, in lieu of either of these, that a warning sign should have been placed upon it. So we think that the jury must have understood that when the words “method of construction” of the connection were used, they had reference to this situation presented by the testimony.

Further objection is made to the giving of an instruction that any promise made by the mill company to remove the by-pass would not relieve the city. This instruction correctly states the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P. 831, 136 Wash. 295, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roscoe-v-city-of-everett-wash-1925.