5 Iowa 271 | Iowa | 1857
The errors assigned in this case, relate alone to the instructions given, and refused by the court below. We shall confine ourselves to the more material ones. And first,.,the following instruction, asted by plaintiff, was refused: “ That the plaintiff would have a right to recover, for damages done to a bridge built by him, under the authority of a court having a right to grant such authority, even though such bridge was not on a public highway.” In refusing this instruction, we think, there was error. Whether the bridge was, or was not, built on a public highway' — whether it was, or was not, built under the authority of the proper county court — could in no manner change the liability of the defendants, for wantonly destroying the same. If A shall build a bridge, distant from any public road, so that no person may ever pass it, and though he may build it with or without the license of the proper court, no one has a right, because it is thus distant from the highway, to destroy it. It is as much his property, and he has the same right to build it, and be protected in the possession and enjoyment of it, as if erected on the highway, and recognized and treated as a part of it.
The plaintiff asked the following instruction, which was refused, and he excepted, “ that no person has a right to tear down and remove a bridge from a public highway.
The next error assigned, relates to the giving of the following instruction, asked by defendants: “That if they believe, from the pleading and evidence, that this is an action merely for an alleged injury to the realty, and that there is no evidence that the realty is located in Pottawatamie county, or that the injury, if any, was done in said county to said realty, they may find for the defendants, the venue in such cases being local and material.” To say no more, there are two objections to this instruction: The first is, that it submits to the jury to determine from the pleadings, the nature of the action, or for what it was that the plaintiff sought to recover. It is the duty of the court to determine such questions, and they should never be left to the examination and decision of a
The Court, at the request of the defendants, gave the following instruction, the giving of which was excepted to, and is now assigned for error: “That although the plaintiff may produce a license from the county judge of the proper county, to erect a toll bridge on the Nishnabottany, as alleged, on a regularly laid out highway, leading across said stream, yet if said plaintiff was not the owner of the land on which said bridge was erected, said license did not authorize said plaintiff to take, for the construction of said bridge, the personal or real property of another, until the damage therefor, if any, had been ascertained previously, according to the statute in such case made and provided.” However correct it may be, as an abstract proposition, yet this instruction, it seems to us, was not warranted, when we consider the nature of the plaintiff’s action, and the issues made by the pleadings. Plaintiff, in Ms petition, charges the defendants with the destruction of a toU bridge erected by him, across the Nishnabottany, the same being-built by Mm under a license from the proper county court, • in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided. The defendants plead not guilty, and also deny that the land, upon which the bridge was erected, belonged
Appellant finally assigns for error an instruction numbered seven, asked by defendants, and given. This instruction is very lengthy, and attempts to set out, as we conclude, the facts, as defendants claim therein, relating to the title to the land where the bridge was erected, and to deduce therefrom certain legal propositions. It is very evident that the instruction has been incorrectly copied into the transcript, for, as presented to us, it is entirely unintelligible, and conflicting in its statement of the facts as claimed. Inasmuch, therefore, as the case must be reversed, in consequence of the errors before considered and in view of the further fact, that the law applicable to the state of facts, as probably assumed in said instruction, may be sufficiently gathered, for the purpose of a second trial, from what has already been said, we forbear considering the last error assigned, but will remand the cause for trial de novo, where such instruction, if desired, may be put into more intelligible form.
Judgment reversed.