50 Wash. 567 | Wash. | 1908
This is an action against the appellant for the recovery of damages alleged to have been occasioned to the trees and timber growing upon the farm of the respondents, between the 5th day of August, 1903, and the 5th day of August, 1904. Upon issue being joined, a trial was had by jury, and a verdict was obtained by respondents for damages in the sum of $770.65. Judgment was entered and appeal taken.
Again the witness was asked what kind of timber there was on the land, and he replied: “Well, there is pine and fir and’ some tamarack and quite a bit of cedar too.” And the refusal of the court to strike the expression “quite a bit of cedar too,” is assigned as error. In addition to the fact that the expression is too indefinite to be worthy of notice, the whole matter in relation to the amount of cedar was after-wards testified to by the respondent and others, and no possible harm could have come from the expression objected to. The other objections to the testimony are equally without merit.
Many of the instructions of the court are assigned as error, but we will only notice one, as the principal instruction can be sustained under the decision of this court in Park v. Northport Smelting & Refining Co., 47 Wash. 597, 92 Pac. 442. The one noticed above is the basis of this assignment, and is as follows:
“I further instruct you that if you should find from the evidence that any damage has been done to the timber grow*569 ing upon such lands of plaintiff by the noxious vapors and gases arising from its smelter at Northport, Washington,” etc., etc.
This it is contended constitutes a comment on the testimony, in violation of art. 4 of the state constitution. State v. Walters, 7 Wash. 246, 34 Pac. 938, 1098, is cited to sustain such contention. There this court said: “It is not the quantum of the particular comment, but all comment whatever, that is inhibited by the constitution.” Abiding by that announcement, we still find the instruction not obnoxious to the constitutional inhibition, for there must be some comment. It would make no difference so far as the appellant’s liability is concerned whether the gases were termed noxious or not; if they were gases which worked an injury'to respondents’ property, it would be liable for the damages done. This was the first time that the court in the course of a long instruction mentioned the word “noxióus,” but it had already properly instructed the jury that the appellant was liable for any damages done to respondents’ property by reason of smoke, fumes, sulphur, or sulphurous acid and gases which it was shown appellant had discharged into the atmosphere and that had been borne by the winds to respondents’ land. The respondents in their complaint did not even think it necessary to allege that the vapors and gases, which they alleged destroyed their property, were noxious; nor was it necessary. It was sufficient if such gases actually destroyed or damaged the property. In addition to this, when it is proven that the gases and vapors are poisonous and destructive, it is proven that they were noxious. Noxious means hurtful, harmful, injurious, destructive. Therefore the use of the word noxioús added nothing whatever to the instruction. If it is the word “the” that is' objected to, that is evidently a mere inadvertence, and it will not do to reverse judgments for an alleged prejudical instruction, when the instruction as a whole plainly shows that no prejudice was suffered, even though there might have some-small technical error.
Hadley, C. J., Crow, Mount, and Root, JJ., concur.
Fullerton and Rudkin, JJ., took no part.