This is a suit by appellants to recover damages on account of the alleged maintenance of a nuisance or a series of nuisances by the defendant (appellee). The appeal is from a judgment for the defendant enterеd pursuant to its motion for a directed verdict.
The record is fragmentary and appears, upon a study of it, to afford an inadequate *774 basis for a review of the rulings complained of. We have before us only the pleadings, a pre-trial order, a portion of the evidence of a single witness, an offer of proof, and a stipulation of the parties which recites, among other things, the impossibility of obtaining a transcript of the testimony for use on appeal. The pleadings indicate thаt appellants owned a recreational resort abutting upon a publicly owned lake in Oregon and that appеllee conducted logging operations on lands also abutting upon the lake. The dispute outlined in the complaint and аnswer was whether appellants suffered actionable damage by reason of appellee’s operations. The stipulation referred to above recites that prior to July 9, 1944, appellants' closed their resort to the public and subsequently excluded the members thereof from the premises by means of a fence, and that thereafter they used the property only as their residence “and for the housing and entertainment of special guests whom they were willing to acceрt and who made special reservations.”
Appellants attack a portion of the pretrial order limiting the issues for thе determination of the jury to the depreciation, if any, in the value of their property and to their loss, if any, of income therefrom as the result of the acts of appellee. It is claimed that since they admittedly continued to reside on the property after the closing of the same to the general public they were entitled to damages for discomfort and annoyance or injury to health of themselves, as individuals, over and beyond any loss of income or depreciation in property value.
There are several infirmities in this argument. In the first place the pretrial order does no violence to the issues as framed by the complaint. More importantly, the record discloses no objection to the order attacked. Consult Rule 46 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c; Bucy v. Nevada Construction Co., 9 Cir.,
The record dоes not contain the ruling of the trial court in respect of this offer, nor does it show on what grounds the offer was rejected. No witness appears to have been interrogated or even called preliminary to making it, and the offer itself is vague аnd indefinite. It contained no proposal to show that appellants’ property depreciated in value or thаt the income from it declined by reason of the installation of
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the plant; and even the time of its installation was not indicatеd beyond a statement that it was subsequent to July 9, 1944. It seems to be conceded that in Oregon it is error to admit evidence of deрreciation in the market value of a complainant’s property caused by a nuisance that is temporary and whiсh can be abated, Porges v. Jacobs,
This disposes of the only points relied on for reversal.
Affirmed.
