89 Neb. 840 | Neb. | 1911
The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the district court for Lancaster county against these defendants for damages winch he alleged he sustained by reason of his lands being overflowed by water in the seasons of 1907 and 1908, caused by the negligence of the defendants in making certain improvements in their roadbed and track immediately Avest of the city of Lincoln. The defendants have appealed.
The grades, new tracks and trackage are mentioned in
With such assistance, then, as we have had from the briefs, we have tried to analyze this mass of testimony to ascertain whether the judgment against the defendants is justifiable. The improvements are quite extensive and must involve a large outlay on the part of the defendants. They were in process of construction at the time of the floods in question. It is conceded that the particular new channel, described in the petition, which the defendants had constructed for the flow of Middle creek was incomplete. The old channel at this point was covered by the new grades for the tracks, and was therefore wholly obstructed. There is some conflict in the evidence as to the condition of the new channel. The defendants’ engineer-testified that the bed of this new channel at the west end, and where it was intended to receive the water of Middle creek, was only two feet higher than the natural bed of Middle creek at that point. Other witnesses testified that it was from four to six feet higher; and one witness, whose testimony upon that point probably is not very "reliable, made the obstruction much larger. The non-expert, witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the width of the neAV channel was not nearly as great as the width of the former channel of the creek, but' they have made no measurements. The engineers of the defendants testified to the width and depth of the new channel, but they had failed to measure the width of the old channel at the point of their conjunction. The jury might find from this evidence that the natural channel of Middle creek Avas very much obstructed by the work of the defendants, so as to force the Avater from the creek and cause it to overflow the surrounding lands in large quantities. Not far iron? the plaintiffs land the defendants have built ou the north side of the grade a dike or embankment, extending north from the grade several hundred feet, the purpose of which
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Mitchell, 74 Neb. 563, and Smith v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 81 Neb. 186, are cited by the defendant as holding that the evidence must be limited to the market value of the crops destroyed. It does not appear from the opinion in either of these cases that the court was discussing the question here presented. In the-former the question discussed was as to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the amount of damage recovered, although the evidence is not quoted at length. The instruction given by the trial court, in which it is stated that the measure of damage is “the fair market value of the .crop just before the land was flooded, in the manner above alleged, if proved, and immediately there
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.