Owens v. City of Lancaster
Owens v. City of Lancaster
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The evidence for the plaintiffs in this case tended strongly to establish several conditions as the result of the defendant’s user of the stream as an open sewer. First, that it created an increase in the natural flowage of the stream, so that in times of ordinary rains the banks of the stream were overflowed and the plaintiffs’ land was washed with sewage and offal, and the banks of the stream were broken down and washed away. Second, that considerable quantities of filthy and offensive refuse were allowed to accumulate on the banks and in the stream, and not only to obstruct the flow but to emit disgusting, unhealthy and injurious smells and odors, which extended to such a degree over the plaintiffs’ land and buildings as to render the same uninhabitable and prevent the owners from renting the
We apprehend the same principle would apply to the injury inflicted by allowing offensive and injurious odors and smells to issue from the polluting substances discharged into the stream from the city sewers. We think that the plaintiffs’ testimony was quite sufficient to raise questions of fact on these several subjects to carry them to the jury, and that it was therefore error to grant a compulsory nonsuit. The assignments of error are all sustained.
Judgment reversed and new venire awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Stephen J. Owens and Benjamin L. Greider v. The City of Lancaster
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Waters — Use of open stream as sewer — Municipality—Negligence. Where a municipality adopts a stream as an open sewer it is bound to keep open the channel of the stream and to remove accumulations of filth, ashes or other material that obstruct the flow of the water and throw it out of its banks upon the land of adjoining owners. There can be no prescriptive right to neglect so plain a municipal duty. In an action against a city to recover damages for injuries caused by the use of a stream as an open sewer, the evidence for the plaintiffs tended to show that the use of the stream as a sewer created an increase in the natural flowage of the stream, so that in the times of ordinary rains the banks of the stream were overflowed, the plaintiffs’ land was washed with sewage, the banks of the stream were broken down and washed away, and considerable quantities of filthy and offensive refuse were allowed to accumulate on the banks and in the stream, which not only obstructed the flow, but emitted disgusting, unhealthy and injurious odors over the plaintiffs’ land and buildings to such a degree as to render the same uninhabitable, and to prevent the owners from renting the same for any sum whatever. jReid, that the case was for the jury.