49 So. 426 | Ala. | 1909
The complaint, as amended, contained six counts. The affirmative charge was given as to the fourth count, at the request of the defendant, appellant here, and we need not pass on the rulings of the lower court as to the demurrers to it. The other five counts, properly interpreted, stated a substantial cause of action in case, and were not subject to any of the grounds of demurrer assigned. A demurrer goes to the whole count, and, except in suits on bonds, assigning special breaches, is not the proper mode of raising an objection to only a part of the count. — Pryor v. Beck, 21 Ala, 393; Hester v. Ballard, 96 Ala. 410, 11 South. 427; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Hine, 121 Ala. 234, 25 South. 857; Kennon v. Telegraph Co., 92 Ala. 399, 9 South. 200.
The first three counts, as amended, set out with particularity the plaintiff’s ownership, of a mill site and mill on Ohatchie creek, situated on certain described lands, and further alleges that said mill “and pond which supplies and supplied it with water have been situated and located at the point they now are for many years, and plaintiff at the time of the injuries complained of had the right to maintain said pond in the condition it was then in. Construing this language most
Counts 5 and 6 are plainly actions on the case by a lower against an upper riparian owner or proprietor for damages resulting as a. consequence of a pollution of the waters of the stream. In the case of Tennessee Coal, Iron & R. R. Co. v. Hamilton, 100 Ala. 252, 14 South. 167, 46 Am. St. Rep. 48, we quote at length from the numerous authorities pertaining to the rights of parties so situated, and it is the settled law of this state that an action lies for “the casting upon one’s land of dirt and foul water, or substances which reach the stream by percolation; * * * the letting off of
The testimony is quite lengthy, and very numerous objections were interposed and exceptions reserved. Many, if not the most, of these rulings, were free from error, and we will refer to only a few. The objection to the question to the witness Gray: “You say the more land cleared around the banks of a creek the muddier it becomes. I will ask you if it is not also true that the more land that is cleared in and around creeks and mills the more valuable the mill site becomes” — we first held should have been sustained. On further examination we find no valid objection to this question. The answer, to it might tend to show the value of the property and the extent of the damage, if any. The fact that the jury knew this as well as the witness would tend to show that no injury could result from it which is necessary to constitute reversible error. Plaintiff had a right to show .the general nature and character of the
The difference in the market value of the property before and after the alleged injury thereto is not the only measure of damages. Evidence showing loss of custom, expense of remedying the injury, increased cost of machinery to operate, and expense of operation caused by the wrongful act were proper subjects of consideration by the jury. The right of a lower riparian owner to receive upon his land in its natural condition the water from above is what is termed a “natural easement,” and this natural right of property inheres in the estate entitled to the benefits of such rights ex jure naturse independently of grant or prescription. The right to overflow or back up water on the lands of another is of an entirely different character: Such easements “lie in grant,” and can be acquired only by grant, express or implied, or by prescription, which presupposes a grant to have existed. While plaintiff’s deed did not convey
It was error to allow the plaintiff to prove by the witness Lacy, over the objection of the defendant, “what it would cost to remove the dirt and mud out of Wood’s millpond in Calhoun County, Ala.” This proof should have been limited to the cost of removing that part only which was wrongfully placed therein by the defendant. The evidence in this case showed that there was other dirt and mud in this pond than that placed therein by the defendant, and, if the evidence had not shown it, surely courts and juries know that mud in great quantities accumulates in millponds which have been used for BO years or more. The fact that it would have cost more to remove all this mud from the pond than would be the depreciated value of the property in consequence of defendant’s wrong was not the test to determine the amount or proper, measure of damages. It was, no doubt, not offered by counsel for this purpose, nor did the court allow it for this purpose; but it was irrelevant and immaterial and directly calculated to mislead and confuse the jury, and we cannot say that it was without injury, though the court seems to have stated the law correctly as to the measure of damages. We think it was also error to allow the witness Lacy to testify as to the terms of the contract under which he did the work for the defendant, which work occasioned the damages, the sub
It was likewise error to allow the witness Pearce to give his opinion as to how much it would depreciate the property to have the millpond half filled up, and how much if entirely filled up. This was a purely speculative and gratuitous guessing on the part of the witness, and could only serve to mislead and confuse the jury; and there was no evidence that the pond was half filled
For the errors above pointed out, the judgment of the lower court must be reversed and the cause remanded.
■Reversed and remanded.