Wm. Tackaberry Co. v. Sioux City Service Co.

154 Iowa 358
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 154 Iowa 358 (Wm. Tackaberry Co. v. Sioux City Service Co.) 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
Wm. Tackaberry Co. v. Sioux City Service Co., 154 Iowa 358 (iowa 1911).

Opinions

Evans, J.

The petition is lengthy, and we will not set it out verbatim. The following statement from appellant’s argument is a sufficient abstract thereof:

The action is one at law, brought by the plaintiff to recover damages sustained by it on account of -the flooding of the basement of its wholesale house, filled with perishable goods, the flood water coming from Perry creek, which it is alleged, overflowed its banks because of obstructions placed in it by the defendants. The plaintiff alleges in its petition that Perry creek is a natural water course, which [360]*360has its source 'a considerable distance north of Sioux City, and flows in a regular well-defined channel through a thickly settled portion of the residence and business section of the city. The stream as it passes (through -the city has a channel of from fifty to one hundred feet in width, with well-defined banks from fifteen to twenty feet in height. The plaintiff’s wholesale house is in the wholesale and retail business district of the city, and about five hundred feet west of the creek, near where it empties into the Missouri river, and from seven hundred to one thousand from, and below, the obstructions complained of.

Prior to the 10th day of July, 1909, the defendant city constructed and still maintains a large iron bridge across Perry creek, at the junction of what is known as Fourth and West Third streets, constructed so low and short as to materially lessen the capacity of the stream and materially prevent the waters from passing under the bridge, and in connection therewith constructed and maintained a closed cement apron to the south of the bridge, and joined with it in such manner as t'o prevent 'overflow water from flowing back into the channel of the stream; and prior to the said date the defendant Simmons Warehouse Company, without warrant or authority of law, and in violation of the statutes of Iowa, had constructed and was maintaining over the said Perry creek, and in the bed, bottom, and banks thereof, a splid piece of masonry, known as a cement conduit, ... of a size 'and capacity materially less than the size and capacity of the stream; that the said Simmons Warehouse Company, also in connection with the said conduit, 'and without warrant or authority of law, and in violation of the statutes of Iowa, constructed and was maintaining a solid cement apron from the top of the said conduit to the south edge of the bridge constructed by the city of Sioux City and heretofore referred to; that the said cement apron was so constructed that water to the south of the said bridge could not again enter 'the bed of said Perry creek, but was forced out of and away from the bed of said stream and upon public and private property; that the said iron bridge . . . and the apron and conduit aforesaid were constructed under the supervision and co-operation of the defendant Simmons Warehouse Company and the defendant city of Sioux City, and has been so main[361]*361taineld and kept t'o the present 'time. Prior to the said, date, the defendants, Si'oiux City Service Company, the Chicago, Milwaukee & S't. Paul Kail way Company, Chicago & Northwestern Kailway Company, Great Northern Kailway Company, and city of Sioux City, had each built and were maintaining pile bridges in and over said creek at points both to the north and south of plaintiff’s place of business, and in building and maintaining the said bridges they had driven several hundred large piles in the banks and bed of the stream, and had built piers therein, and each is still maintaining the said bridges, piles and piers. Prior to the said date, the other defendants had each constructed buildings between Fourth and Fifth streets on the hanks and bed of the creek, and in the construction thereof they had deposited large quantities of rock, stone, and cement adjacent to their buildings, thus lessening the carrying capacity of the stream.

The plaintiff alleges that the said bridges, buildings, and other structures were so improperly, unskildfully, and negligently constructed and placed in the channel of the creek that no adequate space was left for the free and unobstructed passage of the water, and that through the narrowing and restricting of the channel of the creek in this manner, and by the catching and lodgment of great quantities -of 'debris and drift by the piles, piers, girders, walls, and projections of said bridges, conduit, buildings, and other structures, caused the overflow of the waters of the creek and the flooding of the plaintiff’s premises. The plaintiff further alleges in its petition that, had the stream been kept free from 'obstructions, its waters would have remained in the channel of the stream, and would have flowed into the Missouri river without damage to the plaintiff; that the defendants knew or should have known of the obstructions Which were being placed in the stream, and maintained there, and that they would render the carrying capacity of the creek insufficient; that they would 'divert the waters of the stream, and cause at to overflow, to the injury of the plaintiff and others; that the construction and maintenance of the said obstruction's constituted an unlawful obstruction of tbe creek, and the obstructions united in their effect and results, and caused the 'diversion of the waters.of the creek, and constituted a public and common nuisance, in violation of both public and private rights; and that the 'defendants, [362]*362by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, should have known that the structures would combine and unite in obstructing the stream, and would.constitute a public nuisance in violation of both public and private rights. By -the flooding of the plaintiff’s premises, it was damaged, so it alleges, in the sum of $20,000, for which it demands judgment, and that the obstruction maintained by -tbe defendants, and each of them, be adjudged to constitute nuisances, and an order be made directing tbe abatement thereof.

1. Nuisance: obstruction of stream: several wrongdoers: separate liability: damages. The principal question presented under the motions of the moving defendants is -whether, upon the showing of the petition, a joint liability of the defendants is made to appear. If the facts pleaded show only a several liability, and not a joint liability, then the motions were properly sustained. The appellant contends for the application of the rule that, where an injury is caused to a third person by the concurring wrongful acts of others, each and all such wrongdoers are severally and j-oinfly liable for 'the injury thus inflicte-d. As to -the general. statement of this rule, there is no difficulty. All authorities concur in it. But in -the application -of this rule -to the concrete case difficulty has often been encountered, arid diversity of opinion has arisen. Such is the form of the controversy here. It is mo-t claimed in the petition that the-re was any concert o-f action in the erection of the -alleged nuisances by the defendants, no-r that there was any concurrence of -action in. either place or time. Some ¡of the defendants built bridges across thé stream at different points thereon. Others built structures upon its hanks, .and encroached upon its capacity. But each acted independently and for -himself alone. Because of the lack of concert, appellees contend that each is liable only for his -own wrong, and the consequences thereof. The appellant contends that the rule referred to may apply, even though there be no prior concert of action. A familiar illustration of such an application is a case where'•in a collision may occur between trains owned and -operated [363]

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Bluebook (online)
154 Iowa 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wm-tackaberry-co-v-sioux-city-service-co-iowa-1911.