Bates v. Inhabitants of Westborough

Decision Date27 February 1890
PartiesBATES et al. v. INHABITANTS OF WESTBOROUGH. BATES v. SAME.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

151 Mass. 174
23 N.E. 1070

BATES et al.
v.
INHABITANTS OF WESTBOROUGH.
BATES
v.
SAME.

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Worcester.

Feb. 27, 1890.


Exceptions to superior court, Worcester county; HAMILTON B. STAPLES, Judge.

Action by Lucius R. Bates against the inhabitants of Westborough, and by Lucius R. Bates and others against the same. Judgment was rendered for plaintiffs, and defendant excepted.


[151 Mass. 179]W.S.B. Hopkins and J.E. Beeman, for plaintiffs.

F.P. Goulding and W.T. Forbes, for defendant.


HOLMES, J.

These are two actions of tort, depending upon the same state of facts, to recover for the overflowing of the plaintiff's land with water from the defendant's drain, and set back in the plaintiff's drain. There was evidence tending to [151 Mass. 180]show the following facts, which we assume to be true, for the purposes of this decision.

The plaintiff had gained a prescriptive right to discharge water from his land by a drain to a culvert running under Brigham street, the Boston & Albany Railroad, and beyond; the water being carried from the further side, of late years, by a box drain.

There is a system of drains under different highways, converging into one, under Brigham street, which also discharges through the same culvert. Some at least of these drains, including that through Brigham street, were built by the defendant town, and belonged to it, and the town had a right to discharge through the culvert. The box drain on the other side of the culvert was built by the town upon land of one Smith, under a lease or license granted for a nominal sum. The lease expired more than six years before the date of the suit; but the box drain remained, and received the drainage as before, of which it was the necessary outlet. Smith did not object, but it seems had further negotiations with the town, which have resulted in the building of a new drain since these actions were brought.

The effect of the system of drainage was to bring down and to discharge through the culvert more water, and to discharge it more rapidly than otherwise would have been the case. Within six years before the date of the suits, the culvert had been filled up more or less, the box drain had failed at times to discharge the water freely, and the drain on the plaintiff's side of the culvert had become filled up. From some or all of these causes the plaintiff's land was flowed as alleged.

The plaintiff got verdicts under instructions allowing him to recover if the town had failed to use reasonable precautions in keeping the culverts free from obstructions, or had been guilty of negligence in maintaining a box drain of too small size, or in improperly constructing or negligently maintaining other drains that by themselves, or in connection with the culvert, made a faulty arrangement for disposing

[23 N.E. 1071]

of the surface water, and thus had caused the damage.

These, we believe, are the only facts needing mention. The plaintiff went to the jury on the eighth count alone, which made some of the defendant's requests for rulings immaterial, and we cannot adopt the defendant's construction of a further [151 Mass. 181]remark to the jury, upon which he bases an important part of his argument. The jury were told that, if they should find that not all the acts alleged in the eighth count operated to produce injury, but that some of them did, they could still find on that count in favor of the plaintiff. We think that this was not intended and could not have been understood to mean that any one act alleged would be sufficient, but simply reinforced what had been said already, and meant that less than all the acts alleged would be enough if the...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT