184 Ky. 9 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Plaintiff, H. H. Coleman, brought this suit against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company to recover dam-: ages to his land, caused by overflow. From a verdict and judgment in his favor for $500.00, the railway company appeals.
The first error assigned for a reversal is that the damages are excessive.
Plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land consisting of about 150 acres, and worth $700.00 or $800.00. The company constructed a line of railroad through this tract, leaving a strip of some six acres between its road bed and Marrowbone creek.
Upon this six acres' plaintiff lived and conducted a storehouse. Just above plaintiff’s land was a small drain, across which the railroad is constructed. To permit the water from the drain to pass under the road bed, the company constructed a small wooden box, four feet broad, eight Teet long and eighteen inches deep, which it placed under the road bed. On several occasions when the water was high, debris would accumulate in the box and the water would pass over the company’s tracks and
It is further insisted that the court erred in not submitting to the jury the question whether the nuisance was temporary or permanent, and in not giving the measure of damages applicable to each kind of nuisance. The test is, could the nuisance have been readily abated at a reasonable expense? If so, it was temporary; if not, it was permanent. The character anddocation of the box, as well as the surrounding conditions, show that it could have been readily removed at a small expense. The company’s engineers did not undertake to show that this was not the case. They only stated that the-box was permanent. Under the circumstances, their statements were mere conclusions and were not sufficient to make the question of permanent nuisance one for the jury. It follows that the court did not err in treating the-nuisance as temporary, and giving the measure of damages applicable to such a nuisance.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a, new-trial consistent with this opinion.