16 S.W. 30 | Tex. | 1891
This is a suit for damages against defendant in error for so negligently constructing its roadbed as to overflow plaintiff's pasture lands by damming up the water in a bayou in time of floods.
There are several items of damage in the petition to each and all of which the court below sustained special exceptions, because remote and not the correct measure of damages. The assignments of error call upon us to examine the items and decide whether the court's rulings were correct or not. Plaintiff was using the land for pasturage. In his first count for damages he says the water flowed over five thousand seven hundred and seventy-seven acres of his land and remained there ten weeks, covering the land to a depth of a foot or more, and injured the pasturage and destroyed the same so that plaintiff derived no benefit therefrom for about five months — from the 20th of May to the 20th of October, 1884.
The measure of damages for destruction of grass is its value at the time destroyed. Railway v. Wallace,
Plaintiff also claims damages resulting from an overflow commencing in January, 1885, covering his land with water which remained thereon for a long time, his cattle thereon being exposed to the deep water and not being able to get the grass, from the effects of which certain of them died of starvation and exposure. We think the alleged damages from the alleged starvation of cattle and deprivation of pasturage is too remote. The value of use of the pasture being the correct measure of damages, the fact that the cattle became poor and died for want of pasturage could not be considered. If it could be it would authorize a double recovery — damages for loss of use of the pasture and for detriment to and loss of cattle for want of pasturage. If, however, exposure to deep water caused injury and loss of stock, and the overflow was the direct and proximate cause of such injury, and it was the result of the negligence of defendant, and not of the failure of plaintiff to use reasonable care to protect his cattle after or during the overflow, damages would be recoverable for such loss. So if cattle were drowned. Railway v. Johnson,
The next item of damage is for depreciation in the value of other cattle, caused by starvation and exposure to deep water as a result of defendant's negligence. As already the depreciation from starvation ought not to be recovered, but if it can be shown what the depreciation was as a result of exposure to water illegally turned by defendant upon the pasture, and plaintiff used proper care to protect his cattle, we can not see why he should not recover for the injury so done. It would be a direct injury to his property, unlike the indirect injury alleged by starvation.
The next item of damage is similar to the first as stated in the assignment of error. It claims damages for the deprivation of the use of the land resulting from the overflow beginning the 1st of January, 1885, the water remaining on the land so long as to render it worthless for purposes of a pasture from the 1st of January, 1885, to the time of bringing suit and up to the time of filing the amended petition.
As before stated, we think the measure of damages ought to be the reasonable value of the use of the land for pasturage during the time alleged, such value of the land in the condition it would have been in had it not been overflowed.
Our conclusion is that the court erred in sustaining defendant's special exceptions to the petition, and that the judgment of the court below should be remanded for trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Adopted March 24, 1891.