113 S.W.2d 1152 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1938
Reversing.
The above three cases were tried together below, all being suits seeking damages of appellant on account of injury by the overflow of water on their properties. Appellees *173 Salyer and Rice sued for damages for injury to real estate; Hester sought damages for injury to personal property.
In his petition Rice and his wife alleged ownership of a house and lot in Johnson county, on the waters of Jennie's creek. It was asserted that Big Sandy Kentucky River Railroad Company had "in the construction, operation and maintenance of their railroad, carelessly and negligently constructed, and have since carelessly and negligently maintained and operated a bridge over Jennie's Creek * * * and a large fill on the north side of said creek below and in close proximity to the house and lot owned by plaintiffs * * * and that by reason of the negligent and careless construction, maintenance and operation of said railroad bridge and fill, large quantities of water have accumulated above said bridge and inundated plaintiffs' lot and the lower portion of their dwelling house; flooded their well and outhouses to such an extent that thevendible and rental value thereof have been completely destroyed, to their damage in the sum of $1500.00."
Later plaintiffs filed amended petitions in which they alleged "that within five years last past, by reason of the alleged careless and unlawful construction, maintenance and operation of said railroad bridge and fill, the defendants have wrongfully, carelessly and negligently permitted drift * * * and debris to collect and accumulate in the creek, and within the aforesaid aperture provided by them under said bridge for the passage of water, and by reason thereof, and the negligent, careless construction and maintenance, the flow of water in the creek has been held back and caused to accumulate and inundate plaintiffs' property; that such has caused the channel of the creek to fill up and render it insufficient to carry off the water draining therein, and overflow, leaving its channel bed, and stand upon plaintiffs' property; to wash away the soil and deposit debris thereon." So much of the petition as sought recovery of the Big Sandy Railroad was later dismissed and the trial proceeded against appellant, which filed answer denying the allegations of the petition. By amended answer, it pleaded that any alleged damage to plaintiffs' property was occasioned solely by rains or floeds, "of unusual occurrence in the vicinity, and which could not have been reasonably anticipated by persons of ordinary *174 experience and prudence." This was denied by reply. At this point appellant moved the court to require plaintiff to elect as to which cause of action it would further prosecute, whether that for "temporary" or "permanent" damages, as set up in the petition as amended. Without waiving its motion, it filed a second amended answer, denying the allegations of the petition as amended, pleading that the bridge and fill referred to in petitions constituted a permanent structure, erected by its predecessors (Big Sandy) more than twenty years prior to the filing of the suit by plaintiffs, thus bringing to its defense the five-year statute of limitation.
The court later overruled appellants' motion to require the plaintiff to elect, with exception by appellant. A reply denied the allegations of the amended answers, thus bringing about issues. The pleadings, procedure, motions, and rulings thereon were identical in the Salyer's case; the only difference being in amount of damages sought for injury to a different lot.
With the issues thus formed, and the actions consolidated, after proof and instructions, the jury returned a verdict for Salyer in the sum of $750, and for Rice $700. Motions for a new trial were overruled, and appellant is urging a reversal of the judgments entered in accord with the verdicts. The sole contention is that the court erroneously overruled its motions for a directed verdict made at the close of the testimony, insisting that its plea of limitations should have prevailed as a matter of law.
It is unnecessary for us to go into minute description of the bridge and fill, alleged to have caused the damage, nor the history of the building thereof. Reference to the case of Chesapeake O. Ry. Co. v. Caudill,
In that case we quoted from Louisville N. R. Co. v. Bennett,
"That a single recovery must be had for all damages resulting from a permanent structure properly built; (2) that for a structure unlawfully or negligently built, though intended to be permanent, recurring recoveries for such improper or negligent construction may be had as the injuries occur; (3) that for a temporary structure recurring recoveries may be had as the injuries occur; and (4) that whether the construction was negligent is a question for the jury under the evidence, if the same be conflicting. Madisonville, H. E. Railroad Co. v. Graham,
147 Ky. 604 ,144 S.W. 737 . But there is vet another class of such cases, to which this belongs, recognized and accurately described in that opinion; and that is where the structure, though permanent and negligently constructed, cannot be repaired or remedied so as to avoid the recurring injuries, at a reasonable expense, or where the expense of repairing or remedying would be so great as to authorize the railroad company, in the exercise *176 of its right of eminent domain, to condemn the property so injured by the negligent structure, then there must be a recovery once for all."
Thus it is seen that in the instant case appellees might have been entitled to recovery for damages caused by a permanent structure properly built, the recovery to be once for all, and sought within five years from the date of completion thereof, or from the date of the first injury, or from the date when it became apparent to complainant that there would, on account of the structure, be resulting injuries. Chesapeake O. Ry. Co. v. Robbins,
"The court properly instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that the embankment was a permanent structure. The appellee testified that the first injury to his property caused by the presence of the embankment occurred in the spring of 1927. That being true, the 5-year statute of limitations applied, and the court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a directed verdict in its favor."
Likewise the appellees might have recovered under rule (2), laid down in the Bennett Case, supra, for injuries caused by a permanent structure, unlawfully or negligently constructed, such recovery being in the same measure as where the injury is by a temporary structure, that is, for damage caused by each recurring injury, and limited to five years before such injury. The measure, however, in such case to be, not the difference in the fair market value just prior to and after the injury, but the diminution in the value of the use and enjoyment of the property, or its rental value. City of Richmond v. Gentry,
However, we need not further discuss the applicable *177
rules relating to the measure of damages, the application of the statute of limitation, nor the distinctions between the measures when applied to the particular injury, nor to undertake to determine whether the structure here in question was of a permanent or temporary character, as defined in Dugan v. Long,
In the introduction of proof as to the damages, recovery was limited by the parties, their attorneys, and by the court in its instructions, to the "fair and reasonable market value of said house and lot * * * immediately before any injury found to have occurred to said lot and house within five years next before October 29, 1935." The injury for which all parties were seeking damages occurred in April or May, 1935. While we are of the opinion, after reading the original and amended petitions, that the court should have sustained appellant's motion to require appellee to elect, his failure to do so is now of no consequence, since all the parties treated the damages recoverable, by injury from a permanent structure. The parties having elected to thus seek recovery, their election must stand. In Louisville N. Ry. Co. v. Conn,
Both Salyer and Rice owned property in the immediate neighborhood, on the same side of Jennie's creek, Salyer's lot being approximately 300 feet above the bridge and Rice's property still further up the creek, and there can be little doubt from the proof (and it is not otherwise contended) but that each suffered damage by the high overflow in the spring of 1935.
Salyer acquired a limited estate in his property by deed in 1905 or 1906 and perfected his title in 1925. He said that he came into full possession some "seven or eight years ago." It appears that Rice acquired his property in 1903, since which date, with the exception *178 of a few years, he has occupied it. Mr. Salyer, testifying, said that he had known the properties in question for 35 or 36 years, and that water never got up over the properties "until after the bridge was built." He moved on his property in 1906, but lived there only a short time. He said the water had gotten into his house prior to five years before the filing of the suit. It had gotten into the house before 1925. "It was some years after the bridge was built." He said that after the railroad was built, "the banks had begun to build up, and the water continued to rise higher each year"; that the tide in 1935 was not any higher than they had previous to the time "I told you about it getting in my beds," and this was about 1929. "There was then backwater and mud in the house. I don't think there has been many spring seasons but what the water got up in and around the bank." He excepted 1930, when there was a drouth. He remembered very definitely that while his aunt lived in the property, "eight or tell years ago, the water got in the house and ruined all her household goods." He insisted that he saw water in the house, "past seven years ago, longer than that." And as to the damage to his property, or what "destroyed its value," he said the damage in the last four or five years was "more than any other time." He was positive that there had been more damage since he "bought the boys out (1925) than I ever did know of, but I had bought the property and had to keep it."
Appellee Rice did not testify, but his brother, who had looked to the institution and conduct of the suit for him, said he was sixty-eight years of age and had known Jennie's creek — in the neighborhood of the bridge — all his life. He was asked:
"In all that time you only know of one flood or tide that was as high as this particular flood in March 1935?"
He answered:
"Going back further, different times it was higher than it was this time. In May 1927 it was several inches higher, and then on back a year or two before the railroad was built, it was bigger, and then back thirty years, in February, there was still a bigger tide than any of these, according to the fences that was washed off along the banks. The *179 high tide in May 1927, it was several inches higher than it was in this March tide."
He thought it got in Dave Rice's house in 1927, and several times between that date and the 1935 tide, "about five different times."
One witness had seen the water in Rice's house about 1929, and in Salyer's house at different times. In 1928 or 1929 the tide was about the same as in 1936; the water got into the Salyer and Rice properties in 1927, and this flood caused "part of the damage" to the properties, as he had fixed the damage. Another, who lived in the neighborhood all his life, testified that he had seen the water on these properties so many times that he couldn't tell when it was first flooded, but it had been "five or ten years ago." Other witnesses for appellee testified to the same effect. Nearly all the witnesses testifying for appellees admitted that their estimated damage, that is, the difference in the market value of the various properties before and after the flood or floods of 1935, was due in part to the damages which had occurred in previous years, as some express it, "when the water got into the property the first time, the property began to decrease in value."
A review of the proof shows nothing whatever to indicate other than a permanent structure. The proof by appellant, beyond a doubt, so shows. There is no proof to indicate that the structure was either built or changed (as in the Caudill Case, supra) or any improvements made upon the bridge or fill within "the five years last past." This suit was practiced throughout upon the theory that the bridge in question was so constructed originally that drift was permitted to lodge against the bridge, and gradually year after year, causing a filling up of the creek bed above the bridge. This, according to the proof, had been occurring for many years prior to the 1935 tide, and not only this, the damage to appellees' properties had been started and growing each year for more than five years prior to the institution of the suit. There is a total absence of proof necessary to bring the case within the class mentioned in point 2, in the quotation from the Bennett Case, supra.
The court's instruction was improperly predicated on the theory that since appellees confined their testimony *180 to damages occurring during the 1935 flood, "and within five years" before the filing of the suit, they were entitled to recover on the basis of a permanent damage, that is, the difference in value of the properties immediately before and after the injury, by the 1935 tide. Nor was the instruction proper, had the case then been pitched on the right to recover on the ground that the structure in the first instance was negligently or unlawfully built, or thereafter maintained. An instruction under such a state of facts, where there were recurring injuries, should measure the damage by the diminution in the value of the use and enjoyment of the property, or its rental value. Such damages may be recovered as often as an injury occurs under such circumstances, provided suit be instituted within five years of the alleged injury. Louisville N. R. Co. v. Conn, supra. The case here was not practiced, nor such proceedings indulged as would permit recovery, since all proof was directed to the difference in the fair market value of the land.
In the third case it appears that Hester was a tenant of A.M. Salyer, living at the time of the alleged injury in the house on the same lot, for which Salyer sought damages in the above case. He had moved into the property in May, 1934, and continued to live there after that time. His suit sought recovery for injury to gardens, and personal property, some of which was damaged and some destroyed, by the overflow of water. The jury returned a verdict in his favor, and from judgment following the verdict appellant moves for an appeal.
Hester first pleaded that the appellants in constructing and repairing the bridge did the work in such a negligent manner as to impede the flow of water, when said stream was swollen from heavy rains." That the said negligent and careless work caused the water to overflow during the first days of April, 1935, during the five years next before the filing of his petition. He states that appellant drove piling in such a negligent way and in such numbers that it would not allow drift to pass under the bridge, thus backing the water up and damaging his property.
In reply he alleged that:
"The bridge is a wooden structure built of decaying material, and same has been and is being repaired *181 by placing sound timbers in place of rotten timbers, and that same has been done and such repairs made by defendant since taken over control and ownership of said road, and within the last twelve months."
Plaintiff, however, fails to allege that such repair or placing of sound timbers in place of rotten timbers had been done in a negligent or unskillful manner, or in such a way as to cause overflow or resulting damage or injury to his property. Conceding that the two pleadings, taken together, might be construed to state a cause of action, differing from the causes in the companion cases, we are convinced after reading all the testimony that it is nowhere shown that there had been any repairs made, negligently or otherwise, or any replacement of timbers at any time since the bridge was originally constructed, or taken over from the Big Sandy by appellant.
This case proceeded, as in the Salyer and Rice cases, on the theory that the structure was permanent. Hester, except in so far as the injury to and the value of his property was concerned, stood on the same proof as was introduced in the Salyer and Rice cases, and no other. Testifying for himself, as did others, as to the condition which caused his damage, he offered no proof tending to show that the structure was not permanent, and the appellants clearly proved, in every sense in which the words are ordinarily used, that it was a permanent structure. While appellant was the tenant, and not the owner, he stood in the same attitude in regard to his right of recovery as did his landlord.
The appellee testifying said that the water got up into his house several times in 1934. Speaking of the 1935 flood, it seems there were two, if not three, high tides in March, April, and May. He said the water had gotten into the house so many times he "couldn't remember" the dates. "It has been in the house seven or eight times since I have been there."
The rule is well established that where damages result from what is known as a permanent structure properly built, there must be a single recovery and to be sought within the statutory period. Louisville N. R. Co. v. Bennett,
"The reason for the rule denying recovery to a person who has purchased land, knowing of the liability of overflow, where the obstruction is permanent, and there must be one recovery for all, is that such purchaser, knowing conditions and knowing that no repair work can be required of the railroad, is presumed to take these facts into consideration in making his purchase."
City of Richmond v. Gentry,
The same rule is applicable to one who rents property. Any liability of the appellant in this case grows out of and is predicated upon its failure to perform a duty and obligation to adjoining land owners, and the damage it is subjected to is measured by the depreciation in market value, or diminution in the use or rental value of the land affected by the alleged improper construction. For this there was a cause of action in the landowner, and he sought to recover damages for the injury to his land. The appellee here was not the landowner, but a tenant who has voluntarily occupied the property, subject as it was to the danger of overflow, as is clearly established by the proof, cannot in this way acquire a right of action. If he, or other tenants of the property owner, could sue, as he has done, the defendant would be at the mercy of all tenants who chose to place their personal property in such an exposed position, and appellant might be compelled to pay many times more than the original value of the real property to those whose property was in no wise affected originally by its act. Chicago A. R. Co. v. Smith,
Since here the structure was clearly proven to have been of a permanent nature, and so treated by all parties, the reasons for reversal set out in the Rice and Salyer cases apply here, and it is our conclusion that the court should have granted appellant's motion for a peremptory instruction, in this and the two other cases.
Motion for appeal granted in the Hester case, and in all three cases judgments are reversed and causes remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.