Mayrant v. City of Columbia
Mayrant v. City of Columbia
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
An order of the Circuit Court overruling a demurrer to the complaint having been affirmed on appeal (77 S'. C., 281, 57 S. E., 857), this cause was brought to trial at the November term of the Court of Common Pleas for Richland county before a jury, and a verdict *275 was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for sixteen hundred dollars. The respondent appeals, assigning error in the admission of the testimony, in the instructions to the jury, and in the refusal of a new' trial.
A statement of the pleadings will be found in the opinion rendered in the former appeal. It is sufficient to say here that the plaintiff, as the owner of a lot of land in the city of Columbia, seeks to recover damages for the flooding of her land, the allegation being that the city of Columbia so altered the surface drains and raised the sidewalks on the adjacent street that the water is collected from the lots and street above and thrown on plaintiff’s property, where it remains for some time, because the drains on the street are not large enough and not so constructed as to permit its escape. The allegation is that this defective grading of the street and defective and insufficient drainage is due to the negligence and mismanagement of the defendant, and, without fault of the plaintiff, has resulted, using the language of the complaint, “in rendering plaintiff’s houses uninhabitable, thereby causing plaintiff’s tenants, from time to time, to vacate the said houses, thereby causing loss of rentals to plaintiff, and thereby causing the plaintiff and the members of her family, dependent upon her, to become sick and unhealthy.” The answer was a general denial.
The trial was concluded under circumstances most distressing to the presiding Judge and all others concerned, owing to the sudden death of Mr. Crawford, the eminent counsel for the plaintiff, while conducting the cause. If the part of the charge given to the jury on the 2'lst of November be considered alone, it would be subject to the criticism made in these exceptions; but on the following morning, when the charge was resumed, the Circuit Judge explicitly and repeatedly charged that the plaintiff could not recover unless the evidence showed that injury to her property was due to - a defect caused by the negligence or mismanagement of the defendant. The last instruction given on this subject, at the conclusion of the charge, was in this language, submitted as one of the defendant’s requests: “In order for the plaintiff to recover the jury must be satisfied by the preponderance of the evidence that the injury complained of was caused by the casting of the water from defendant’s drains on to plaintiff’s property, and that such casting of the water was the direct and natural result of the negligent construction of the drains or streets.”
*278
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mayrant v. City of Columbia.
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Evidence — Damages—Cities and Towns — Harmless Error. — In an action against a city for negligence in the construction of its drains and streets so that the water was collected and stood on plaintiff’s lot, rendering it damp and unhealthy, admisssion of cost of filling in the lot above the level of the streets was error, but not material in this case. 3. Ibid. — Ibid.—Evidence may be admitted in support of any item of damage alleged in the complaint and permitted to remain in it. 3. Charge — Ibid.—Error in admitting evidence tending to show consequential damage is cured by instruction that measure of damage is the actual damage to the property and not consequential damages. 4. Ibid. — Ibid.—Cities and Towns — Negligence.—Although the first part of the charge is open to the objection that the defendant would not be liable for overflowing lands of plaintiff by collecting water there without the further instruction that there would be no liability unless the injury was due to defendant’s negligence or mismanagement, this defect was fully covered in the latter part of the charge. 5. Cities and Towns — Damages—Negligence—Contributory Negligence. — A city is not liable for negligently flooding lands if the injured party has contributed to or in any way brought about the injury by negligent action or nonaction on his part. 6. Ibid. — Ibid.—Set Off. — A city cannot set off against its liability for negligently flooding lands an increase in the market value of property due to the general advance in real estate values. 7. Damages — New Trial. — Verdict in this case is not capricious, but based on estimates of witnesses. 8. Ibid. — Nuisance—Indictment.—That some neighbors of plaintiff suffered injury from flooding their lots as plaintiff did does not show that the community at large suffered any damage or was in any wise concerned in the matter.