Wendt v. Village of Richmond

129 N.W. 38, 164 Mich. 173, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 965
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1910
DocketDocket No. 122
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 129 N.W. 38 (Wendt v. Village of Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wendt v. Village of Richmond, 129 N.W. 38, 164 Mich. 173, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 965 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

The defendant, a small village, has appealed from a verdict and judgment of $1,500, recovered by the plaintiff in an action for injury to her health. She charges that ditches or drains within the village, and made by the village, were allowed to collect filth from sinks, water-closets, etc., and discharge the same into other open drains, thereby causing the refuse to be conveyed to a ditch in front of her home, to which there was no adequate outlet, where it remained, giving off foul smells and malaria, causing her illness and discomfort. The defendant denied that it had done more than to construct highway or street ditches to carry off surface water, and alleged that it had never authorized or knowingly permitted any one to discharge slops or any kind of filth into said ditches. It also denied any knowledge or notice of the condition stated by plaintiff, and claimed that if plaintiff suffered any injury, it was due to the condition of her own premises, and the act of a neighbor in draining slops, etc., into said ditch, for which the village is not in any way to blame. In his charge to the jury, the learned circuit judge said that if the defendant caused, or knowingly permitted, these things to be collected by its ditches and conveyed to plaintiff’s premises, without providing an outlet, it would be liable, after the lapse of a reasonable time within which to remedy the condition, for such injury as should be caused to her health thereby, unless the unsanitary condition of her own premises contributed materially.

With this brief outline, we will examine such of the assignments of error as raise questions of importance in this controversy. As they are numerous, we will take them up by subjects as counsel have discussed them, though perhaps not in the same order.

[176]*176Direction of Verdict. Counsel assert that the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant, and that the refusal of his first three requests was error. This implies that in his opinion the plaintiff did not make a grima facie case, for if she did, the case should not have been taken from the jury.

We find very little said in the brief upon this subject, but counsel’s position is reflected by his requests:

“(1) Under the plaintiff’s declaration and the claims of counsel presented at the opening of the case, plaintiff could only recover for personal sickness and ill health caused by noisome, noxious, offensive, and unwholesome smells, vapors and stenches arising from filth and sewage deposited in the highway ditch in front of her premises, creating there a nuisance through the wilful or negligent acts of the village of Richmond. She could not recover for any discomfort or inconvenience caused her in the use of her house by such noxious smells, etc. She could not recover for any contamination of her well. She could not recover in any event, if her own negligence and lack of ordinary care caused or contributed materially to her trouble. Nor could she recover, even if a nuisance were created in the highway in front of her house, if ordinary care on her part would have avoided any evil results from that nuisance, for the reason that the testimony in the case is overwhelming that the village of Richmond neither wilfully nor knowingly caused or permitted the alleged nuisance to be created. A fair consideration of the entire testimony in the case leads to the conclusion that there is no sufficient evidence to warrant any finding that plaintiff’s sickness was caused by noisome, noxious, offensive, or unwholesome smells and stenches arising from a ditch in front of her premises into which the contents of priyy vaults and sewage has been deposited by any fault of the village of Richmond. For the foregoing reasons, defendant is entitled to a verdict.
(2) A fair consideration of the entire case shows conclusively that the testimony in favor of the defendant’s claim is so overwhelming that if a verdict were rendered in favor of the plaintiff, it would be the duty of the court to set the verdict aside.
“ (3) The nuisance complained of existed at plaintiff’s premises in the township of Lenox. It is not seriously [177]*177claimed that the defendant village is liable because the condition of the ditches in front of plaintiff’s premises was the result of any wilful or knowing act of the defendant, but it is sought to hold the defendant responsible, because it is claimed that the village authorities had notice of the existence of a nuisance on Howard street in said village, just back of Springborn’s hotel, and also notice that said nuisance on Howard street had caused and created the one claimed to exist in the township of Lenox, in front of plaintiff’s premises. It is a rule of law that one who does not knowingly or wilfully create a nuisance, but passively permits one to exist after knowledge thereof, can only become liable for any damage resulting therefrom after notice of its existence and notice that it is causing the damage complained of, which notice must be given a sufficient length of time prior to the injury to permit a reasonable opportunity to remove or abate the nuisance. Plaintiff’s own proofs show that whatever condition that amounted to a nuisance existed in the highway in front of her house had existed since 1896, and that if her sickness was caused by the condition of the ditch at all, it was caused prior to the spring of 1905, her contention being that a weak and debilitated condition, arising from long-continued presence of the noisome, noxious, etc., stenches in front of her house, brought about the subsequent sickness and ill health, or, in other words, that all of her trouble in 1904-5-6-7 and 8, including her operations, resulted from a weak and debilitated condition brought about by her being subjected, for years prior thereto, to the offensive vapors from this ditch. The proof is conclusive that no notice of the existence of any trouble whatever in front of plaintiff’s premises was given to the village until December, 1904, at which time, if the condition of the ditch was responsible for plaintiff’s ill health, the damage had been done. No such notice of the condition of the ditch in front of plaintiff’s premises is shown to have been given to the defendant that would warrant defendant being held liable for damages resulting to plaintiff from the condition of the ditch. Particularly is this true, inasmuch as plaintiff claims no damage for aggravation of any pre-existing trouble. The notice required to make the village liable for a bad condition of the ditch in question, even if such bad condition existed as the result of a nuisance in the village, of which the vil[178]*178lage had notice, must be such a notice as would fairly apprise the village of just the conditions that existed, where they existed, and that plaintiff claimed injury, or possible injury, therefrom.”

The first request seems, in its last analysis, to rest upon the claim that the evidence upon the only question which defendant’s counsel conceive to be left in the case was overwhelmingly in favor of defendant’s position. There was certainly a dispute in the evidence on the subject, and it follows that it was proper to leave it to the jury. We have said this so often, that it is unnecessary to cite authorities.

The second request should not have been given. The duty of the court as to granting a new trial has never been an infallible test of the propriety of submitting a case to the jury. It might be a good rule for many cases, though that is open to doubt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 N.W. 38, 164 Mich. 173, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wendt-v-village-of-richmond-mich-1910.