Hayden v. Albee

20 Minn. 159 | Minn. | 1873

By the Court.

Berry, J.

The plaintiff brings this action to recover damages for injury to his lands occasioned by defendants’ dam across Elk River, praying also that such dam may be abated and enjoined, so far as it is thus unlawfully injurious. The complaint contains a history of the dam in question during a period of fifteen years before the commencement of this action, and among other things, June 1868, and January, February, March and April, 1869, are specified as times at and during which the dam was raised in height so as to cause the overflow complained of. No other times at which the dam was raised except these being specified in the complaint, the defendants claim that the court below erred in receiving, against their objection, evidence as to the raising of the dam after April, 1869.

The gist of the complaint is the unauthorized maintenance by defendants of the dam so as to overflow plaintiff’s land to his damage in several respects particularly alleged, though defendants had been duly notified to remove the same so far as injurious to plaintiff. It was, therefore, entirely unnecessary for the pleader to allege that the dam was raised in height by defendants at any particular time, or at all. This being the case, it is difficult to see why the allegation that it was raised in the months specified, should preclude plaintiff from showing what he might have shown without any allegation of time, viz.: that it was raised at times other than such specified months, especially, when it is considered that the complaint contains no allegation that it was raised at the times pleaded and no other. Besides, there is no reason, so far as we see, why the general rule that allegations of time are for • mal, and heed not be proved as laid, does not apply to this *163case. And, finally, even if the materiality of the allegations of time be admitted, the proof received would raise a case of variance merely, which would be disregarded unless defendants showed that they were misled thereby to their prejudice. Washburn vs. Winslow, 16 Minn. 37.

The testimony of the plaintiff as to the value of the ford from the time it became impassable in consequence of the dam in 1868, to the time of the commencement of this action, was the testimony of the owner of the ford who had habitually used the same in hauling his crops and wood from one part of his farm to the other, and who was, therefore, presumably as well able as any person to estimate the value of its use as a ford, the correctness of his estimate being of course subject to the test of a cross-examination.

The testimony as to the injury to the grass land, and to the wood land, was admissible upon like grounds. The objection that the testimony objected to went to the entire value of the ford, grass land and wood land, and not to the injury done to the same before the commencement of this action, is not, upon the record, well founded in fact.

The defendants further object that plaintiff was permitted-to show damage suffered after the commencement of the suit. This was entirely proper with reference to the prayer for the abatement of the dam, for the purpose of showing that the nuisance complained of still continued to exist to plaintiff’s prejudice. The charge given to the jury sufficiently instructed them not to include in their verdict for damages any injury occasioned to plaintiff since the commencement of the suit. So far as the wood land was concerned, it was- entirely proper to charge that if the overflow prior to the commencement of the action caused the timber to die, it was not im - portant that the timber did not in fact die till afterwards, and the same remark is applicable, in effect, to the charge in *164reference to the injury to the grass land. In both cases the injury was done before the commencement of the action, so that the charge instead of being in conflict with the doctrine laid down in Dorman vs. Ames, 12 Minn. 455, is supported by that case.

The general objection taken to the charge, viz.: that it instructed the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the full value of the land overflowed, is not well founded. The charge is very long, consisting of ten distinct propositions, evidently framed with the purpose of instructing the jury very fully as to the proper standard and rule of damages, and fairly read, we think, it cannot be said to have the meaning-attributed to it by defendant. On the contrary it, in substance, instructs the jury that the plaintiff (if his proof is sufficient) is entitled to recover for the deprivation of the use of his ford, and for the injury to his grass land, and wood land, and the grass and timber growing thereon, to which there could certainly be no good objection.

The defendants asked the court to charge the jury as follows, viz.: “ The owners of land on which may be a structure proved a private nuisance, and injurious to the property of 'another, cannot be held liable for damages resulting therefrom without proof of connection therewith other than mere ownership of the land.” Whether this instruction was good law or not is unimportant. It was properly refused in this case for the reason that the answer not only does not deny the keeping up and maintenance of the dam by defendants which is alleged in the complaint, but the entire tenor, theory and spirit' of the answer, admit such keeping up and maintenance by defendants, and are irreconcilable with any denial or attempted denial of the same.

These are all the points made by defendants which we deem it necessary to discuss, and the result is, that the order denying a new trial is affirmed.