140 S.E. 440 | N.C. | 1927
The evidence tended to show that the plaintiffs owned a farm of eighty-nine acres on Brush Creek, in Randolph County; that a pond of water, covering a few acres, and a grist mill had been maintained there for several years; that about seventy-five feet below the dam there was a spring, water from which was used by the plaintiffs for drinking and domestic purposes; that the defendant had a hosiery mill at Staley, *645 from which dye water, after draining through settling pits, flowed down a dry branch into Brush Creek and into the plaintiff's pond; that the pond had a green scum on it when the water was low, and that offensive odors therefrom annoyed the owners and occupants of the dwelling. The action was prosecuted for the recovery of damages resulting, it was alleged, from a nuisance created by the defendant. The following verdict was returned:
1. Are the plaintiffs the owners of the land described in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
2. Has the defendant unnecessarily or unreasonably polluted Brush Creek, as it flows through plaintiffs' premises, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
3. What damages, if any, have plaintiffs sustained by reason thereof, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: $1,200.
Judgment for the plaintiff, and appeal by the defendant on errors assigned. In response to the third issue the jury awarded the plaintiff permanent damages; and to the proposition that upon the pleadings, the evidence, the record, permanent damages could not be awarded the principal exceptions are addressed. Whether these exceptions should be sustained is the question for decision.
The jury was instructed, in accordance with the rule approved in Brownv. Chemical Co.,
When the case we have cited was tried in the Superior Court the second time permanent damages were allowed, and on appeal the defendant took the position that it was not a case in which an award of permanent damages was permissible. On this point it was said: "As an ordinal or independent proposition, the Court is not prepared to differ with defendants' view that the cause is not one permitting the award of permanent damages as a matter of right. The cases in which *646
that principle has been thus far allowed to prevail in this State are those where it was expressly established by statute or where the injuries arose from structures or conditions permanent in their nature, and their continued maintenance was protected and guaranteed by the statutory power of eminent domain, as in case of roads and railroads, or because the interest of the public in this continued existence was of such an exigent nature that the right of the individual owner was of necessity and to that extent subordinated to the public good. See cases Harper v. Lenoir,
In a later case against the same defendant (Webb v. Chemical Co.,
In cases of private ownership an issue for permanent damages may be submitted by consent of the parties. Morrow v. Mills,
New trial. *647