69 Mo. App. 431 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
The defendant operates a railroad in Newton county. Near the city of Neosho the railroad crosses Shoal creek valley. At that point Shoal creek runs north and south through the centre of the valley, the flow of the water being to the south. On the west side of the stream its banks are about twelve feet above the surface of the water at its usual stage. The banks on the east side are five or six feet lower. The stream is about one hundred feet wide at the point where the railroad crosses it. In the original construction of the .railroad a solid embankment was constructed from the eastern edge of the valley across the lowlands to within about one hundred and twenty-five feet of the stream. Prom that point to the stream the railroad track was supported by trestlework. This embankment brought the track on the east side of the creek to the grade of the higher lands on the west side. On the west side of the stream and a short distance from its west bank, there is a low swale or depression. The railroad passed over this on a trestle. In 1894 the then owner of the railroad put in a new truss bridge across the stream. This bridge is one hundred and five feet long and rests on stone abutments on either bank. It stands twelve feet above the surface of the water at its ordinary flow. At the time this bridge was put in, a portion of the space occupied by the
“Plaintiff further states that by reason of the careless, negligent, and unskillful construction and maintenance of said bridge by making it lower and shorter, and by filling it with solid earth and stone the space formerly occupied by the trestle on the south end thereof, and by the careless, negligent, and unskillful replacing of the trestlework across the slough with earth and stone, leaving only a small aperture for escape of water, by each several act, and by both, the defendant obstructed the free flow of water along Shoal creek, as it had done theretofore, and dammed up the proper waterway of Shoal creek, and to cause wood logs and drift to accummulate on the east side of said bridge and embankment; that on December 17, 1895, by reason of the carelessness and negligence of defendant in carelessly, negligently, and unskillfully reconstructing said bridge and taking out the approaching trestle, thereby narrowing the flow of water, and by taking out the trestle across the slough the water of Shoal creek was dammed up and caused to flow back upon the plaintiff’s land on the upper and eastern side thereof and the crop of corn standing in the shock on said land was wholly destroyed, as were also four acres of loheat planted in the ground, to plaintiff’s great damage, and also plaintiff’s said land was permanently injured and damaged by reason of the soil, which is of a very rich quality, being washed away, together with fencing, and by gravel, stone and sand being deposited in large quantities thereon, by all of which plaintiff was greatly damaged in the sum
The answer to the original petition contained a general denial. It further alleged that the plaintiff’s damage (if she suffered any), was caused by the accumulation of surface water daring an unusual and extraordinary rain. It was also averred that the alleged changes in the construction of the railroad were made by the Kansas City, Port Smith & Southern Railway Company, the then owner of the road; that subsequently that company sold the road and its franchises to the Philadelphia Construction Company, and that the defendant had been put in possession of the road by the last named company, merely for the purpose of operating it and for no other purpose, except to make such repairs as were necessary only to the running of the road.
There was a trial before a jury, and at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and also at the close of all the evidence, the defendant asked for an instruction of nonsuit. This instruction the court refused to give, and the defendant excepted. The finding was for the plaintiff, and judgment was entered accordingly. The defendant has appealed.
On the other hand the defendant contends that there is no substantial evidence that the waters of Shoal creek were in any manner obstructed by the bridge, or that the defendant was negligent in the construction of the bridge, or that the manner of the construction of the railroad at the bridge directly contributed to the plaintiff’s injuries. The demurrer to the evidence presents these questions.
The railroad company had authority to bridge Shoal creek, but in doing so the statute required it to restore the stream “to such state as not unnecessarily to have impaired its usefulness.” Sec. 2543, R. S. 1889. Usually this duty is discharged by erecting a bridge across the entire bed of the stream and putting it high enough to prevent the catching and accumulation of drift during high water, and by placing no obstructions in the stream so as to impede the free passage of the water therein. There is not a particle of evidence that the defendant failed in these matters. It is conceded that the span of the bridge extended from bank to bank; that it was twelve feet above the surface of the water at its usual stage, and there was no evidence of the accumulation of drift above it, although the water in the creek was higher than it was ever known, and there is no pretense that any obstructions were placed in the channel.
It may be argued that on account of the lowness of the banks on the east side of the creek it was the
But if this point be conceded, the plaintiff’s action must fail, for the reason that there is no substantial evidence that the concurring negligence of the defendant in failing to provide sufficient escapes for the water was one of the efficient causes of plaintiff’s damage. Coleman v. Railroad, supra; Ellet v. Railroad, supra. In the Coleman case we And the following satisfactory statement of the law as announced by the supreme court of Pennsylvania. “We apprehend that the concurring negligence, which, when combined with the act of God, produces the injury, must be such as is in itself a real producing cause of the injury, and not a merely fanciful, or speculative, or microscopic negligence which may not have been in the least degree the cause of the injury. In other words, if the act of God in the particular case was of such an overwhelming and destructive character as by its force, and independently of the particular negligence alleged, or shown, to produce the injury, there would be no liability though there was some negligence in the maintenance of the
Looking at the case from every standpoint, and giving the evidence a construction most favorable to the plaintiff’s case, we are unable to sustain the judgment, if well settled principles are to govern. We therefore conclude that the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence ought to have been sustained. The judg