147 N.E. 453 | Ill. | 1925
William Johnston instituted suit in the circuit court of Henry county against the city of Galva to recover damages caused by the pollution of a natural water-course which ran across his farm. A jury trial resulted in a verdict for *600 the plaintiff for $4000. The court required aremittitur of $1500 and judgment was rendered for $2500. Upon appeal to the Appellate Court for the Second District the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed. The record is here by writ of certiorari granted upon the petition of the city.
For many years William Johnston owned 112 acres of farm land, of which the north 32 acres were situated within the limits and upon the southern boundary of the city of Galva. The remaining 80 acres constituted a rectangular tract, one-quarter of a mile in width from east to west, adjoining the north 32 acres and extending south for one-half of a mile. Johnston and his family resided on the north 32 acres. The south 55 acres of the farm consisted of pasture land, on which his livestock grazed. Across this pasture, from a point on the east line of the farm about one-eighth of a mile north of its southern boundary, a creek ran in a northwesterly direction. About the year 1912 the city of Galva, a municipal corporation with a population of approximately thirty-five hundred, constructed a sewer system. A part of this system conveyed the sewage from the business houses and dwellings of about five hundred people in the south and east portions of the city to a settling tank and filtering beds located south of the corporate limits. After subjection to whatever purification process the tank and beds afforded, the sewage passed through an open ditch, then through certain tile drains and a concrete abutment, and finally into the creek at the east line of Johnston's farm. Water which was collected from an area of approximately 1100 acres to the northeast, east and southeast of Johnston's land flowed through the creek prior to the construction of the sewer system. The extent of that flow was disputed. On behalf of Johnston, the defendant in error, it appeared that it was practically continuous throughout the year, while the city of Galva, the plaintiff in error, offered testimony that the creek was often dry. The defendant in error did not, however, rely upon the creek to supply water for his *601 livestock, because he obtained water for that purpose from a well near his residence. The evidence concerning the quantity and character of the sewage which was emptied into the creek was also in conflict. From the testimony offered by the defendant in error it appeared that not all of the filtering beds were utilized and that sewage left the disposal tank after partial purification; that at times it became so thick that it would hardly flow; that sludge was deposited on the bottom of the creek, though decreasing in quantity as the creek pursued its course westward; that the sewage was of a dirty milky color and had an odor which was more offensive in warm, dry weather than it was after freshets occurred or when it was cold, and that the odor was noticeable for a considerable distance from the stream. Witnesses who had made a study of sanitation and disease-producing conditions and had inspected the creek testified that germs causing typhoid and scarlet fever and diphtheria were carried in the sewage, and that these germs might infect the milk if the cows were permitted to wade in the creek. Certain witnesses testified that there was no odor from the creek, while others stated that there was an odor which was perceptible for only a short distance. Witnesses for the plaintiff in error admitted that the creek was polluted to some extent and that plans for a new sewage treatment plant were under consideration by the city.
The defendant in error claimed damages for the five-year period beginning in October, 1917. During that time he owned approximately twelve cattle, fifteen horses and one hundred hogs, and he milked five to seven cows. His claim included, among others, the following items: (1) The cost of hay and grain fed to his milch cows from May to October of each year while they were confined to the barn lot to prevent their coming into contact with the sewage instead of grazing in the pasture, as they did before the sewer emptied into the creek, approximately $450 annually; (2) the loss of milk which resulted from keeping the cows *602 out of the pasture, thirty to thirty-five quarts a day, at ten cents per quart, the market price, or $450 each year; (3) the cost of labor, $125, and the value of his own time, $375, each year for driving the horses to and from water because they refused to drink out of the creek, aggregating $500 annually; and (4) the value of three horses which died of lockjaw in the year 1919, $750. Evidence in support of these items was admitted.
The plaintiff in error insists that it was the duty of the defendant in error to mitigate the damages, if any, by building a fence on both sides of the creek, and that in any event the cost of such a fence would be the full measure of his damages. It appeared that it would cost $160 to build the fence and that its maintenance would require the expenditure of $10 annually. Prior to the construction of the sewer system by the city and the deposit of its sewage in the creek there was no necessity for such a fence. The defendant in error had enjoyed the unobstructed use of his pasture land and the flow of water in the creek in its natural state, undefiled by sewage. The construction of the sewer system by the plaintiff in error did not divest him of these rights. He could not be deprived of them except by due process of law. (Tetherington v. Donk Bros.Coal Co.
It is further contended by the plaintiff in error that the items for (1) the cost of hay and grain fed to the cows of the defendant in error while confined to the barn lot because of the pollution of the waters of the creek, (2) the alleged resulting loss of milk, and (3) the cost of labor and the value of the defendant in error's time in driving his horses to and from water, were purely speculative and conjectural and for that reason are not proper elements of damage. If by reason of the wrongful acts of which the defendant in error complained he sustained these items of damage they were proper elements to be submitted to the jury. Damages must, however, be the proximate result of the wrong of which complaint is made. Where the right of recovery exists the defendant cannot escape liability because the damages are difficult of exact ascertainment. The nature of the inquiry in the instant case is such that it is difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain with mathematical certainty the amount of the defendant in error's damages, but this difficulty affords no answer to a cause of action which results from a breach of duty imposed by law. The unliquidated damages growing out of the commission of a tort are seldom susceptible of exact measurement. The rule *604
is, that while the law will not permit witnesses to speculate or conjecture as to possible or probable damages, still the best evidence which the subject will admit is receivable, and this evidence is often nothing better than the opinions of persons well informed upon the subject under investigation. (Daughetee v. Ohio Oil Co.
The plaintiff in error also contends that evidence of the value of the three horses should not have been admitted, because it was not shown that the sewage in the creek caused the lockjaw from which they died. Dr. H.N. Heflin, a physician, testified that if there were open sores on horses or cattle the wounds might become infected and result in lockjaw. Frank Luper, a veterinarian, who attended one of the horses, testified that he did not find any abrasions on the animal, and that tetanus germs were most commonly found in garden and barnyard soils. Other witnesses testified that tetanus germs were prevalent in barnyard manure, barren lots and on barbed wire fences. No testimony was offered that there were any open sores or abrasions on any of the three horses owned by the defendant in error. There was no testimony that the horses were more likely to contract lockjaw from tetanus germs in the creek than from those germs in other places on the farm. A review of the testimony fails to establish that the polluted stream was the cause of the lockjaw. So far as the record shows, the horses might have become infected elsewhere. The evidence concerning the source of the tetanus germs which infected the horses was purely speculative and conjectural. Where resort must be taken to speculation or conjecture for the purpose of determining whether the damage results from the *605
wrongful act of which complaint is made or from some other cause, damages cannot be allowed. (Indiancpolis, Bloomingtonand Western Railway Co. v. Birney,
The judgments of the Appellate and circuit courts will be reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.