Schrieber v. Driving Club

15 Misc. 632, 37 N.Y.S. 348, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 701
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Misc. 632 (Schrieber v. Driving Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schrieber v. Driving Club, 15 Misc. 632, 37 N.Y.S. 348, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 701 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Schuchman, J.

This is an appeal from a. judgment entered on the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.

No exception having been taken by either side to the charge of the court, it must be assumed to be correct.

Appellant’s' attorney moved for a. new trial on all'-the ■ grounds specified in section 999 of the Code.

; Said motion was denied, an order was entered • thereon and an appeal was taken from said order.

•• This brings up for review the evidence adduced at the trial,, and although' contradictory, if enough is contained therein to sustain the plaintiff’s cause of action (the jury being the sole judges of the facts of the case), the verdict must be sustained.

The plaintiff claims that while he was the lessee of some garden land between One Hundred - and Sixty-foürth and One Hundred and. Sixty-fifth streets, west of Railroad avenue, in the city of New York, and while the defendants were, the lessees of Fleetwood race track, which adjoined his land on the north, the defendants, by their .carelessness or negligence, or some wrongful act on their part, in not keeping the drainage on their land in proper shape, order or repair, and- in dig[633]*633ging superficial ditches on their land, wrongfully accumulated water in such large quantities that the existing drainage could not carry it off, and thus threw it off on the plaintiff’s adjoining lands, flooding them and destroying his garden seeds, etc., to his damage.

The evidence established that on May 2 and 3, 1893, there was a heavy rainfall; that plaintiff’s lands were flooded and damaged thereby.

The grounds of Fleetwood park in the northwest are higher than in the south 'and southeast.

There appears to be about three acres of wet meadow land in the northwest thereof, which is drained by the open drain or trench into eight acres of low, wet meadow lands in the south.

There is also an'old pond in the north which was formerly drained by a stream, known as Low Eavine, southward into the old mill brook, but now drained into the culvert, which is of stone, two feet by two feet six inches, built in the southeasterly part of said park, and connects with an eighteen-inch pipe carrying the water off into Webster avenue sewer.

In short, the drainage of the ^ whole park is accomplished from its north and northeasterly upper lands to the south and southeasterly lower lands.

The evidence 'shows that the defendants, at some time, caused ditches to be dug in said park .in order to drain the water from the upper part to the lower. That an old culvert in the park opposite Grand avenue was stopped up; that thereby a large quantity of water was carried down to the point where another culvert built in the south part of the park connected with an eighteen-inch pipe near Webster avenue, which pipe carried the water over into the Webster avenue sewer. That this last-mentioned culvert being considerably larger than the eighteen-inch pipe with which it was connected, and carrying water from, the east, and this additional water coming down from the upper western part, over these new made ditches, .exhausted the capacity of the eighteen-inch pipe to [634]*634carry off all the quantities of water accumulating, and caused it to overflow and run southerly upon plaintiff’s adjoining low lands.

Mr. Schreiber testifies: “ That on May 5th she went to see Mrs. Biele, at Mo. 1 Grand, avenue, the first house next to- the- fence of Fleetwood park; she looked out a side window in Mrs. Biele’s house and saw water in the park ; the water was at the club house right opposite Mrs. Biele’s house; she saw a trench dug there; she showed me the trench ; there was water in the upper pond (which was near there); there was water in the trench; it 'was running; it was running down this way into that di-t'ch that got dug; that ditch was made so that the water could run down to the lower pond ; it was a fresh dug ditch; the ditch that was dug in the- park ran from the track where the horses ran out of it down to the lower ‘ part of the ground ; it ran right through the trench that got dug open.”

Maling testifies : “ I am a hotel keeper; in 1893, kept the' club house in Fleetwood park; kept it till the end of 1894;. I saw one pond at the foot of the club- house, which is at ■ the. west side of Fleetwood park; I am only familiar with the upper pond ; the water in the upper pond came from all over' the hills, and some of it went into the sewer which is connected with the club house, and when a heavy rainfall came it overflowed and went into the pond under the track, into' this upper pond; in this upper pond there was some sort of a cessjiool; in 1893, about the time of the-flooding of Schreiber’s garden, they were . digging a trench there; I saw them dig a trench; there is no pond there now; the water is drained off by this trench; I do not recollect how long -the trench was there; it was over a year-; I know that the trench was dug i-n the spring of 1893 ; that was the only trench that was dug that I saw.”

Mr. Thompson testifies: “ I am a civil engineer and am employed in the department of street improvements in the twenty-third and twenty-fourth wards,- and bad charge, of -the building of the Webster avenue sewer; I have- been in Fleet-[635]*635wood park and have heard an upper pond testified here to-day * that would appear to be this plot of ground at Grand avenue if it were shut off by an elevated ground like the race track if the water was dammed back it would necessitate the forming of that pond at that place if the water accumulated there.”

Mr. Platz testified : “ I keep a hardware store and live at-161st street and Cortland! avenue; I was born in that neighborhood ; Gran'd avenue is not quite the lowest poink; I recollect the stream that flowed south there; I have seen the out-, side of Eleetwood park at Grand avenue, and have noticed an unused culvert that ran under the track; it is all stopped up now; that ran under the track into Grand avenue; on the other side of the track where the culvert ran was the upper pond; I noticed the ditch that had been dug there; that trench ran from about the center of the upper pond to the track and along the inside of the track down to the lower pond, and the pond opposite that on Grand avenue is where this unused culvert was stopped up; this culvert on Grand avenue is on the track property; I saw it inside the track fence; I could not see any culvert on the outside of the fence; it did come out before they filled up the avenue, but how it cannot,. - because the. avenue is almost as high as the track is.”

Mrs. Bieletestifi.es: “I live.in Grand avenue.near Fleet-wood park race track; my house is next to the fence, and I moved there in March, 1892; Mrs. Schreiber came to my house; I took her to the side window and looked over into-the race track with her; I showed her the water that was standing there; we saw the water and the gutter-; I saw a man digging that gutter, and before that trench was dug I think there was more water there ; how much water 1 do not know, very much when the trench was dug; the ditch was-there When Mrs. Schreiber came and I saw the man digging it,”

Mr. Guión, witness for. the defendant, testifies: I examined this portion where they claim that this ditch was dug; a piece of land is drained by that ditch; I noticed, ditches dug in the lower part of that tract of land, and did. [636]*636not display these ditches on the map because Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Misc. 632, 37 N.Y.S. 348, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrieber-v-driving-club-nynyccityct-1896.