The plaintiff is and for many years has been the owner of a quarter section of land in Calhoun county, Iowa. The land is somewhat low and in its natural condition there is a shallow pond or slough of some ten or fifteen acres in extent near the western boundary. The natural slope and drainage of most of the quarter section and of some of the adjacent lands is in the direction of this pond, the outlet of which was to the west across the highway bounding the tract on that side. In the year 1902 the defendant company, by condemnation or by purchase, secured , a right of way and constructed its railroad acrоss the farm and through the pond near its outlet substantially as shown upon the accompanying diagram.
At the close of the testimony on part of plaintiff, the defendant presented a motion for a directed verdict- in its favor on the grounds (1) that no proper proof of damages had been offered by the plaintiff, and (2) that plaintiff by herself or by her agent had contributed to the injury for which she was asking damages. The motion was sustained, and it is from the judgment entered upon the directed verdict that plaintiff appeals.
The record shows that the court below, throughout the course of the trial, consistently ruled that the measure of the plaintiff’s damages, if any, was the difference between the value of her land with a good and sufficient culvert- through the railroad embankment and the value of the same land
I. Beginning with the last proposition above referred to, let us inquire whether there was such a showing of contributory negligence or fault on the plaintiff’s part as to justify the court in holding as a matter of law that she was not entitled to recover.
In leaving this branch of the case it is well to suggest that we have discussed the matter of plaintiff’s alleged contribution to the injury to her land upon the theory adopted by counsel in argument; but we do not wish to be understood as conceding that the doctrine of contributory negligence has any proper application to actions like the one now before us. See Randolf v. Bloomfield,
The principle upon which a party creating a continuing nuisance is held liable to successive actions for damages is that he has a legal right and is under legal obligation to remove, change, or repair the structure or thing complained of, and thereby terminate the injury to his neighbor; and, failing so to do, each day’s continuance of the nuisance is a repetition of the original wrong, and a new action will lie therefor. Railroad v. Mihlman,
In Powers v. Council Bluffs,
In a note to the same case in
As applied to obstructions of water and drainage ways
injuries, if any, to the adjacent land, were consequential, only arising from the negligence of the defendant in constructing it. Such being the case, it would seem an elementary proposition that to recover damages the plaintiff must show that he has in fact suffered injury therefrom, and not simply that an injury is threatened. Possibly the threatened injury might be sufficient ground to sustain a suit in equity for an injunction (Moore v. Railroad Co.,
The Powers case, above cited, has been much criticised as announcing the doctrine that the right of action to the landowner dates from the negligent act which results in injury to his property, and as making an improper application of the rule of permanent damages. It has also been repeatedly distinguished by us in later cases, and we have declined to extend the application of the doctrine there announced. Pettit v. Grand Junction,
In Sullens v. Railroad Co.,
Hpon the trial in the court below the plaintiff offered testimony as to the depreciation in the value of her land, but in most cases fixed the date for the cоmparison as that of the completion of the railway embankment, instead of the date -of the flooding of the land. In one instance, however, the witness, one J. Buffnam, had his testimony directed to the date of the flood, and, while the examination was somewhat indefinite, it was sufficient, we think, to take the question to the jury. The testimony as to the value of the land at the time of the construction of the embankment, which was within a year or less before the alleged injury, was perhaps objectionable if the case was being tried as one for continuing damages; but no specific objection was made thereto as being too remote. Plaintiff was presenting her case evidently upon the theory that her damages were orig
So far as the question of practice in this branch of the .case is concerned, the order of the trial court directing a verdict for the defendant is also erroneous, within the spirit of the deсision in Carl v. Coal Co.,
For the reasons stated, a new trial must be ordered, and the judgment appealed from is therefore reversed.
