Curran v. East Pittsburg Borough
Curran v. East Pittsburg Borough
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
By an ordinance approved June 20,1898, the defendant borough authorized and directed the grading, paving, curbing and sewering of Main street, from Braddock avenue to the southerly right of way line of the Pennsylvania Railroad. The second section of the ordinance provided that the said improvement should be made according to the plans and specifications
The plaintiff was the owner of three houses situate on the western side of Main street. Prior to the improvement, the cellars of two of these houses drained into the cellar of the third, which was lower, and nearer Braddock avenue, the terminus of Main street, and from the latter cellar the water was carried to a gutter in the street, which was about two feet from the property line.
In making the improvement the grade of the street was raised slightly at this point, and it was necessary to sustain the curb on the outside by filling up the space where the drain of the plaintiff formerly emptied. This cut off his drain, and he could not drain into the sewer, which was constructed as part of the improvement, because the borough did not construct an outlet or extension of this sewer, from Braddock avenue to Turtle creek until two years later. During this period the plaintiff alleged that he sustained damage by reason of the stopping up of his drain.
The question of law is, whether the plaintiff could maintain an action of trespass, in other words, whether, as alleged in his statement, the defendant “ did wrongfully intercept or stop up the plaintiff’s sewer.”
It will be seen from the foregoing statement of indisputed facts that the construction of the sewer by the borough with
The judgment is reversed.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Municipalities — Eminent domain — Damages—Remedy—Public improvements. The absolute liability for injury to property imposed by the constitution, and putting it on the same footing as a talcing for public use, is such injury only as is the direct, immediate and necessary or unavoidable consequence of the act ot' eminent domain itself, irrespective of care or negligence in the doing of it. For such injury a proceeding before viewers is the appropriate remedy. But for injuries by negligent performance of the work, the remedy must be by action of trespass. In applying this rule another equally important principle is to be kept in mind, namely, that the discretionary power to construct sewers and other improvements, and to select the plan is vested in the municipal authorities. When it is said that the injury for which damages may be awarded in proceedings before viewers must be the unavoidable consequence of the act of eminent domain, it is clearly not meant that the claimant may be turned out of court merely because, in the opinion of the viewers, the court or the jury, a different, and in other respects equally good, plan might have been adopted by the city which would have worked no injury to adjoining properties. The question is, was the injury the necessary consequence of the execution of the plan adopted, or was it the consequence of negligence in executing the plan ? In the former case the damages may be assessed in this form of proceeding, in the other case not. Where a borough in making a street improvement changes the grade so as to fill up a space where the drain of a property owner formerly emptied, and thus cut off the drain, and does not connect the drain with a sewer which was part of the improvement; and the work is done without negligence and in pursuance of a general plan of improvement adopted by the borough, the landowner’s remedy for the injury is by proceedings before viewers and not by an action of trespass.