Detweiler v. Groff

10 Pa. 376 | Pa. | 1849

Burnside, J.

The second and third errors assigned are the only ones worthy of notice. The third and fourth are without substance or ground of complaint.

The second error is assigned to the rejection of Christian Ely as a witness. He was tenant of the defendant, in possession of the mill, which was supplied with water from the dam charged as the nuisance. He rented the mill on the shares; came to the property in the spring of 1847, after suit brought, and had agreed to continue the next year (1848). He was objected to, and rejected on the ground of interest. If authority was wanted, the case of Riddle v. Dixon, 2 Barr, 372, goes far to settle this question. It *378was there held, that a stranger to a suit for damages, occasioned by the erection of a dam, where land is thereby flooded, is not an incompetent witness, even though he may have granted the right of which the party cannot avail himself but by thus swelling the water,

Here the witness could gain nothing by the verdict; it could not profit him, nor could he be made liable for either damages or costs. The objection, if any existed, was to his credit, not to his competency.

2. The plaintiff gave some evidence that the dam of 1844 was a foot or more, higher than it had ever been before. Whether, when rebuilt and repaired in 1844, it was materially raised, so as to flood the lands of the plaintiff, was the important inquiry before the court. There was some evidence from witnesses on both sides, that the present dam was not more than three feet five or six inches high, from the suface of the water below, to its top. The mill was an ancient one, of some sixty years’ standing. There was evidence that, for more than forty years prior to 1844, the mill had been capable of doing, and had constantly done merchant work, and to as much advantage as any mill in the neighbourhood. To contradict the witness, who swore that the dam was a foot or more higher than before 1844, the defendant offered to prove by one Snyder, a practical and professional millwright, who had levelled the water and the water-wheel, that'if the dam were a foot lower than at present, it would be impossible for the mill to grind flour and do merchant work to advantage ; and offered further to prove, that it would be impossible for this mill to do the work it was proved to have done.for the last sixty years, &c. The court rejected the offer, on the ground that a professional millwright was not competent to form a judgment and give an opinion on such a subject, not being supposed to be an expert under the rule. We think this evidence ought to have gone to the jury.

In questions of science, skill, and trade, or others of the like kind, persons of skill, sometimes called experts, may not only testify to facts, hut are permitted to give their opinions in evidence: 1 Greenl. Ev. § 440. Their opinions are confined to their judgment on the facts proved: Jameson v. Dunkeld, 12 Moor. 148; 22 Eng. C. Law, 442; 23 Ib. 296.

Whether the dam, when repaired, raised the water in the pool, and dammed it back on the lands of the plaintiff, was the question in issue. It was a question for the jury to determine, under the evidence. Any evidence that tended to elucidate that question, *379was pertinent and proper. A witness was examined, who had seen the dam four years before it was repaired, and frequently after-wards, though he had never levelled the water in the dam, and had no knowledge of the subject, except his often seeing the dam, and he swore that the dam of 1844 was a foot higher than the old one; and this evidence is left to the jury. Is it not pertinent to show he was mistaken, by an experienced millwright, who had levelled the water and measured the height of the dam; that a dam a foot lower would not enable them to grind in a proper manner, when it was in evidence that the mill ground well with the old dam? We think the evidence ought to have gone to the jury, for what it was worth.

The judgment is reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.