107 Ky. 485 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
deiiv^eed the opinion op the court.
The appellant Kate E. Hughes became the owner,' on the. 11th day of June, 1895, of a dwelling house, and the lot of ground on which it was situated, in Paducah, Kentucky. The adjacent lot was occupied by the power house of appellee, who manufactured the electricity used in the operation of the Paducah Street Railway, and by the electric light company of that city.
On the 24th day of February, 1897, she instituted this suit against the appellee to recover a judgment for $2,000, for damages alleged to have been done to her property by the negligent and careless operation, both by day and night, of appellee’s plant. She alleged that, after she became the owner of the house and lot, appellee extended its plant in the direction of, and in close proximity "to her house, by the erection of additional boilers, engines, dynamos, and other heavy machinery used in the manufacture of electricity, that continuously large quantities of smoke and soot escaped from the smokestacks of appellee’s plant, and was thrown upon her residence, greatly injuring its appearance, and destroying the wearing apparel used by the occupants who resided therein; that the operation of appellee’s plant caused her residence to jar and vibrate, the plastering to crack, and the windows and doors to shake and rattle, and that it caused the water used in
Appellee controverted all of the affirmative allegations of the petition, and, the pleadings being made up, a trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and upon this appeal a number of alleged errors occurring upon the trial of the case in the court below are relied on for reversal.
First, it is complained that the court erred in refusing to permit plaintiff to prove that other dwellings in that vicinity were similarly affected. The plaintiff sought in this action to recover damages for injuries to her house, .and it is the effect upon that house, and not others, that was properly the subject of investigation. Even if it had been shown that the operation of appellee’s plant had the effect to damage other property in the neighborhood, that would have been no ground for recovery in this case, and the court properly limited the inquiry to the effect upon the property of appellant.
Another ground of objection is that the court allowed appellee to plead and prove that it had determined to move the machinery from its plant from the lot adjacent to appellant during the next spring, and confined the proof to the damages to her property between the date of its acquisition and the institution of this suit.
A subsequent purchaser of premises injured by a nuisance erected previous to his purchase has no remedy for the injury thereto occasioned by such nuisance previous
And' the general rule is that á plaintiff can only recover compensation for injury to real estate done up to the commencement of his action, unless the injury complained of is of a permanent and enduring character. In that instance, it has been frequently held by this court that a single recovery might be had for the whole injury, as a result of the acts complained of. But in this case it is both pleaded and proven by appellee that it intended to remove its power house within a short time, thus effectually abating the alleged wrongs and injuries complained of. Under this state of the case, we think the court did not err in limiting the testimony, as to the alleged grounds of complaint, to the date of the institution of the action, as appellant would not be estopped from bringing a new suit for. such damages as she might suffer subsequently to the institution of this action.
Another ground of complaint is that the attorney of appellee was permitted to read to the jury in his statement of the case the opinion of this court in the case of Louisville Coffin Co. v. Warren, 78 Ky., 400, and comment thereon, over the protest and objection of appellant.
Section 317 of the Civil Code of- Practice, and subsections thereunder, prescribe the order of proceeding in the trial of a case before a jury. Subsection _1 says: “The plaintiff must briefly state his claim and the evidence by which he expects to sustain it.” Subsection 2 says: “The defendant must then briefly state his defense and the evidence he expects to offer in support of it.”
The purpose of the Code, in permitting these statements
The case of Louisville Coffin Co. v. Warren, 78 Ky., 400, was a proceeding in equity, in which the plaintiff sought to obtain an injunction to restrain the- commission of an alleged nuisance, caused by the issuing of smoke, soot, and cinders from, the smokestack of defendant’s fa#tory; and the rules of law governing the determination of a proceeding of that sort are wholly different from those applicable to an action for damages, like this, and the reading of the opinion in that case, and commenting upon it, to the jury, in the statement by appellee’s attorney, was calculated to mislead, and give them a false impression of the law governing this case. And the fact that the court informed appellant’s attorney that, if he had any case he desired to read to the jury, he might do so, did not help the error. Plaintiff’s attorney had already concluded his statement to the jury, and if he were permitted, after the close of the statement by defendant’s attornej", to reopen his statement, the defendant might, with equal propriety, have asked for similar indulgence.
Another ground relied on for reversal is that the sheriff, who conducted the jury to view the premises, had a conversation with an employe of appellee, who was in charge of the works, and instructed him to put on steam with certain force,. so as to give to the jury a practical ■exhibition of the operation of the works.
The exhibition of the manner of conducting this plant, suggested by the sheriff, whilst the jury were viewing the premises, was in the nature of evidence submitted to them in the absence of appellant and her counsel, and might have been highly prejudicial, as it was possible for the employes of appellee, at this suggestion of the sheriff, to have given only a modified exhibition of the manner of operating the plant, and thus to have improperly influenced them.
Complaint is also made of the instructions, but, from a careful examination of them, we are of the opinion that they correctly state the law applicable to the facts submitted to the jury. No additional instructions were asked by appellant at the time, and we are of opinion that she was not entitled to any. *
The injury from the flow of water, complained of, seems, from the testimony, to have been so inconsequential as not to be important; and the court did not err in failing to instruct the jury, on the question of noise in the operation of the plant, as the testimony shows conclusively that the noise complained of was only the usual and ordinary sound incident to a careful operation of such plants.
But, for the errors complained of, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion