Yes, a sewage drain pipe can be too large.
"Tank with spouts " may refer to either the 'settling tank' or the 'pump tank' in most sewage systems.
Sewer line is clogged or collapsed. With a septic tank, it may need to be pumped out.
There has to be a tank pan under the hot water tank with a drain hooked up to the pan. If the tank leaks, it will go into the pan which will flow into the pipe that you have to have hooked up to the sewage system.
That depends on how your sewage is treated, it could go into a septic tank in your garden or it could go into the public sewer and on to a sewage treatment works (sewage farm). In both cases raw sewage is prevented from discharge directly into the environment and the sewage is retained until natural processes have converted it into water that is safe to discharge.
Rodd the drain.
The passage of sewage from the facility into a septic tank or sewer line ?
Sewage system
There is a blockage.
If you do not have mains sewage it will go into a local septic tank on the property or near by. Where it will be treated an then discharged into a soak away. If you have mains sewage then it goes into the sewer pipes and can either flow out into a river or the sea, or more likely it will go to a sewage treatment works where it will be treated and cleaned. From there it can either be discharged into a river or sea or it might be treated and recycled.
Broken how? As long as the drain is still connected to the tank the water will go into it. Where it goes after that depends on where and how it is broken.
If you have sewage pipes that run into the woods instead of into a septic tank, you would need to replace them in order to not get fined. You would need to disconnect the existing sewage lines and replace with lines that run into a septic tank.