130 Mo. 652 | Mo. | 1895
This is an action for damages instituted by the plaintiff on the twentieth of June, 1893, in the Howard county circuit court, in which the
The gravamen of the charge contained in the petition, is that the defendant, on or about the fifteenth day of August, 1885, threw large quantities of rock and other substances into the bed of Doxey creek in said county, over which the plaintiff had a bridge, at a point in said stream a short distance above said bridge and thereby deflected the current of said stream from the natural course in which it was accustomed to flow, to and against the north pier of plaintiff’s bridge, thereby undermining said pier, whereby said bridge was in the year 1892 greatly injured and damaged and plaintiff was compelled to lay out and expend a large sum of money in repairing the injuries thereto so caused by defendant. The answer was a general denial and a plea of the statute of limitations.
The defendant asks a reversal of the judgment on three grounds: First, that the title of the bridge was not in the county; second, that the evidence of the plaintiff was too indefinite and uncertain on which to base a verdict; and, third, that plaintiff’s cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations.
It appears from the evidence that the bridge in question was originally built and owned by the Glasgow and Huntsville Plank Eoad Company; that in July, 1865, the company transferred its road and bridges in Howard county to said county, and the evidence tends to prove, that ever since such transfer the bridge in question has been used, controlled, and managed as a county bridge by said county as a part of one of its county roads; that in the year 1885 the bridge became out of repair, and the county rebuilt the pier in question at the expense of the county; that this pier was some distance from the natural channel of the stream; that about the same time, the defendant was engaged
The evidence' for the defendant tended to prove that the current of the stream was not changed from its natural course or deflected against the pier by reason of any of the acts or doings of their servants.
Finding no error in the record the judgment is affirmed.