112 P. 70 | Mont. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff recovered judgment in the district court, and the defendant has appealed from that judgment and from an order denying him a new trial. The action is one for damages for the destruction of property belonging to plaintiff. The complaint proceeds upon the theory that defendant was negligent in the maintenance and use of a certain reservoir; that by reason of such negligence the dam of the reservoir gave way releasing a large body of water which overflowed plaintiff’s property, causing the damage for which compensation is sought.
Many years ago the defendant constructed two reservoirs near the head of Lump Gulch, in Jefferson county; the upper one, situated near the divide, covered a large area; the lower one was formed by throwing a dam directly across the gulch and was of much less extent. There was a feed pipe conducting water from the upper to the lower one. The elevation of the lower reservoir
1. It is contended that there is a fatal variance between the pleadings and the proof. The complaint describes with great minuteness of detail the location of each reservoir, the relation which each bore to the other, and defines the duty which the defendant owed in the maintenance and operation of such reservoirs. It is alleged that neither reservoir was properly equipped with overflows or wasteways; that the dam of each was allowed to become defective, insecure, and dangerous, which facts were known to the defendant, or, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, ought to have been known to him. It is then alleged that on or about June 3, 1908, the defendant negligently permitted more water to accumulate in each reservoir than its dam and embankments were capable of retaining; that thereupon defendant negligently turned water from the upper into the lower reservoir, the dam, embankments, waste gate, and overflow outlets of which gave way, thereby discharging large quantities of water down the gulch and over plaintiff’s premises, causing loss and damage to his property.
At the close of plaintiff’s case in chief the defendant moved for a nonsuit. Before passing upon the motion the court struck out all evidence in the record tending to show negligence on the part of the defendant in constructing, maintaining, or using the upper reservoir. The reason given for the ruling was that such negligence, if any had been shown, did not appear to have contributed in any way to the breaking of the dam at the lower reservoir. After this ruling was made, counsel for defendant renewed their motion for nonsuit, adding the additional ground that there was then a fatal variance between the pleadings and proof. The motion was denied, and error is predicated upon the ruling. In their brief counsel for appellant say: “It seems to us there can be no question but what the complaint makes the
But it is said that the act of negligence with respect to the upper dam, and the act of negligence with respect to the lower one, are pleaded as concurrent acts, both of which the plaintiff in his complaint made necessary to constitute his cause of action, and therefore it was equally necessary for him to prove both as alleged. "While the courts have been somewhat lax in the use of the word “concurrent,” we think the correct rule is that where two acts of negligence are charged in the complaint, and the pleading discloses that neither act in itself would have caused the injury, but that the concurrence of both was necessary to produce the result of which complaint is made, then proof of both concurrent acts is necessary. This is the rule deduced from the authorities by this court in Forsell v. Pittsburgh & Mont. Copper Co., 38 Mont. 403, 100 Pac. 218. The complaint in this action charges negligence with respect to the upper reservoir, but it also discloses beyond question that it was the breaking of the dam at the lower reservoir which caused plaintiff’s injury. The plaintiff does not charge directly nor indirectly that but for the negligent construction, maintenance, or use of the upper
The witness Brack was asked: “Q. Did you ever know of any improvements that were made on that dam, or either of those dams, from the first time you saw them in 1894, until it broke ? ’ * and answered: “Yes, sir; there was some improvements made that summer. I think it was in 1894. They put up some cribbing on'the lower dam, and done some work on the side of the big dam.” After the answer was made, an objection was interposed and overruled. The ruling was correct. The objection came too late. (Poindexter & Orr Livestock Co. v. Oregon Short Line R. Co., 33 Mont. 338, 83 Pac. 886; Martin v. Corscadden, 34 Mont. 308, 86 Pac. 33; State v. Rhys, 40 Mont. 131, 105 Pac. 494.) But aside from the ground suggested above for the justification of the trial court’s ruling in the last instance,, the court was correct in admitting the testimony of each of the last two witnesses. If it served no other purpose, the evidence-tended to disclose such a condition at the lower dam for such a length of time that defendant could not be heard to say that he had not been given sufficient opportunity to ascertain the-defects and remedy them. (5 Thompson on Negligence, 5974;. Hunt v. Dubuque, 96 Iowa, 314, 65 N. W. 319.) The evidence was also competent for the purpose of making a comparison of' the condition of the dam in 1894, with its condition immediately prior to the time it gave. way. (Cook v. Town of Barton, 66 Vt. 65, 28 Atl. 631.), The evidence, taken as a whole, fairly shows that the condition of the lower dam had gradually grown.
3. "While the witness Wilson was on the stand, counsel for defendant propounded to bim. this question: “Mr. Wilson, in your placer mining experience have you ever had your flume boxes and ditches filled with water or mud or debris?’.’ An objection was made, but the record fails to disclose any ruling. Counsel for defendant then made the following offer of proof: “Defendant offers to prove by the witness Wilson, now on the stand, that an unprecedented flood or washout which somehow takes out or removes a box flume which is imbedded in a prepared ditch, and also a flume which has been built by cutting into the natural ground, may be at a small expense reasonably expected to be repaired and put in good working condition by the removal of the earth and debris which has become lodged therein, and that the simple filling up or flooding of a flume ditch or flume box does not necessarily mean its destruction, and that the same may be put in good working condition by the removal of the debris therein.” This offer was excluded/and error is predicated upon the ruling. The ruling was correct for several reasons:
(1) The witness had not shown that he was ever in Lump Gulch or knew anything of the extent to which the flood from defendant’s reservoir had damaged the plaintiff’s property.
(2) Considered in the light of a hypothetical question calling for the opinion of an expert, the offer was too broad and covered matters for which a proper foundation had not been laid. If the flume was destroyed, the cost of repairing it was a matter of proof which did not involve any difficulty. If it was merely filled with debris, the cost of removing the debris was a matter susceptible of proof; while, if the flume was injured, but not •totally destroyed, the cost of repairing it was a matter of proof; but none of these matters called for the form of proof contained in the offer. In the absence of a showing that the witness knew the amount of fluming involved, its size, the quality of material used in its construction, etc., or the condition in which it was left by the flood, the testimony sought to be elicited by the offer
(3) The offer contained some matters upon which the witness might properly have given his opinion, and others for which there was not any proper foundation; as, for instance, the assumption that the flume was merely filled with debris. In Farleigh v. Kelley, 28 Mont. 421, 72 Pac. 756, 63 L. R. A. 319, this court said: “So long, then, as the offer included evidence incompetent, coupled with that which may have been competent, the court committed no error in excluding the offer in its entirety. It was not the duty of the court to separate the competent from the incompetent matter, and admit the one and exclude the other. It properly passed upon the offer as made, and was not required to do for counsel that which he should have done for himself.” To the same effect was the ruling in Bair v. Struck, 29 Mont. 45, 74 Pac. 69, 63 L. R. A. 481.
Error is also predicated upon the refusal of the trial court to permit the witness Pratt to answer the following question: “From your experience and knowledge of drainage conditions, would the relative drainage conditions be anywhere near similar from the Chessman reservoir and out of it as they would be in the Hale reservoir and out of it?” In passing upon the objection the trial court said to counsel for defendant: “If you will prove the conditions pertaining in the Hale reservoir drainage territory, and base a hypothetical question on that, the witness may answer and give his opinion in regard to it.” After the ruling was made, the witness was interrogated further, and testified that the Chessman and Hale reservoirs are about two and one-half miles apart; that they are on opposite sides of a separating watershed, and further said: “I should say that the altitude and the timber conditions of both places, and the general topographical conditions are similar, but I don’t think I can say that the precipitation would necessarily be the same. The altitude and the topographical and timber conditions are the same. ’ ’ Counsel did not renew the question to which the objection had been sustained, or attempt further to comply with the suggestion of the court, and are not now in position to complain. Doubt
The following question was also asked the same witness: “Assuming that the dam in question had been there for thirty-years, what have you to say as to its sufficiency for ordinary and expected rainfalls?” An objection to this question was sustained, and error is predicated upon the ruling. In the absence of an offer to prove, it is impossible for ns to say that the defendant was prejudiced by the court’s ruling. The record discloses, however, that immediately after the ruling was made counsel for defendant asked the witness: “Mr. Pratt, what have you to say from your experience as to the sufficiency of the dam in question to hold or take care of a reservoir of twenty acres, whose greatest depth is between twenty and twenty-eight feet ? ’ ’ and the witness answered: ‘ ‘ The dimensions of the dam are ample, and the age of it is a very good indication that it is capable of standing that work.” It appears, then, after all, that defendant got from the witness just what he sought by the other question, so far as we can determine.
4. Objections are made to instruction No. 1, given to the jury. It is said:
(a) The court told the jury that the issues before them related only to the lower reservoir, and complaint is made that this eliminated the issue with respect to the upper reservoir; but, on the motion of counsel for defendant, the court had excluded all evidence relating to negligence in the construction, use or maintenance of the upper reservoir, and certainly they cannot now complain that the trial court adopted their own view. In any event, if the instruction did not set forth the issues as fully as counsel for defendant thought they should have been, it was their duty to offer an instruction to meet their views. Having failed to do this, they cannot complain. (Hardesty v. Largey Lumber Co., 34 Mont. 151, 86 Pac. 29.)
(b) It is said that the instruction is objectionable in that it assumes as a fact a matter in dispute, viz., that the lower dam actually broke or gave way. Admitting that the instruction
(e) The third objection is that this instruction submits to the jury the pleadings for a more complete understanding of the issues involved. We will assume, without deciding, that this form of objection raises the question of the right of the trial court to submit the pleadings to the jury. Section 6749, Revised Codes, provides: “Upon retiring for deliberation, the jury may take with them all papers which have been received as evidence in the cause, except depositions or copies of such papers as ought not, in the opinion of the court, to be taken from the person having them in possession; and they may also take with them notes of the testimony or other proceedings on the trial taken by themselves or any of them, but none taken by any other person.” In some states having similar statutory provisions, the practice of submitting the pleadings to the jury has been condemned. Manifestly the only purpose which a court can have in permitting the jury to take the pleadings with them to the jury-room is to obtain a definite idea of the issues tried. If the issues are stated fully in the instructions, the pleadings do not serve the jury any purpose. If the court undertakes to state the issues, but does not do so to the satisfaction of counsel for either party, it is the duty of the dissatisfied counsel to propose an instruction which meets his views. In Paxton v. Woodward, 31 Mont, 195, 107 Am. St. Rep. 416,
5. Objection was made in the trial court to instruction No. 5 given, on the ground that it permitted a recovery upon proof of negligence at the lower reservoir, ignoring altogether the allegations of negligence at the upper reservoir. This presents the same question considered in paragraph 1 and subdivision (a) of paragraph 4 above, and which has been determined adversely to appellant’s contention. It is said that this instruction also eliminates the defense of act of God; but that defense was properly presented in other instructions. The charge of the court is to be considered as a whole. The court cannot be required to present every phase of a case in a single instruction; but if the charge in its entirety fairly presents the questions involved, it will be held sufficient. (Harrington v. Butte, Anaconda & Pac. Ry. Co., 36 Mont. 478, 93 Pac. 640.)
6. We think instruction No. 6, given by the court, is not open to any objection made to it in the trial court. In effect, this instruction told the jury that if the injury to plaintiff’s property was occasioned by a combination of, first, negligence on the part of the defendant, and second, an unprecedented flood, or, in other words, an act of God, then plaintiff would still be entitled to recover if the negligence of defendant was a proximate cause of the injury. No doubt, had the defendant requested it, the trial court would have defined “proximate cause” in the language of this court in Mize v. Rochy Mountain Bell Tel. Co., above. The instruction correctly states the law as declared by this court in Meisner v. City of Dillon, 29 Mont. 116, 74 Pac.
We have examined the other assignments made by counsel for appellant, but do not find therein any questions which merit special mention. . In our review of this case we have proceeded upon the theory followed in the lower court—the theory of negligence on the part of the defendant. Just what effect should be given to sections 2138 and 2139, Revised Codes, has not been urged upon our attention, and we shall not express our views until the question has been fully presented.
This record contains four hundred and forty closely printed pages, and in our opinion is as free from error as any we have had before us. The cause was tried exceedingly well on the part of the court and counsel; the issues were fairly presented to the jury, and with their disposition of them we find no reason for interfering.
The judgment and order are affirmed..
Affirmed.