The Lone Star Canal Company brought this suit against D. L. Brous-sard and George ■ Staples to recover $1,314, water rates for supplying water to defendants for 219 acres, a part of their rice crop of the year 1912, with interest and attorney’s fees, under a written contract which provided that the defendants should pay as water rental $6 per acre for each and every acre of land planted in rice by the defendants during said year, and which should be watered in whole or in part by plaintiff. Defendants answered by general denial and other pleas not necessary to be stated, and by way of cross-action set up that, subsequently to the execution of the written contract, and before they had prepared the land for planting, and before the plaintiff had applied water to 150 acres of the 219-acre crop, they had decided not to plant said 150 acres, because of the lateness of the season, but that plaintiff expressly requested them to plow, prepare, and plant said 150 acres, and made a new agreement with defendants in regard thereto, whereby plaintiff agreed that if defendants would plant said 150 acres in rice, plaintiff would pump and sup-lily water for them for a month after the regular season, which closed September 1st, in order to mature their rice crop thereon; that, relying upon this agreement, and understanding, defendants plowed and planted said 150 acres in rice, but that plaintiff breached its agreement to furnish water to mature the crop at the time it was most needed, whereby the crop suffered deterioration to the amount of $3,266.25, whereof three-tenths was- suffered by their landlords and the remainder, $2,286.38, being credited with the water rates sued for, left $946.38, as the damages claimed by defendants. The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict for defendants for the sum of $2,280.28, less $1,340, water rent, leaving $946.38 as the damages sustained by defendants. Defendants voluntarily entered a re-mittitur of $87.36, and judgment was then duly entered in their favor for $859.02, from which the plaintiff has appealed.
Appellant’s first assignment of error is predicated upon the refusal of the court to *650 give to the jury its first special charge, which contained a peremptory instruction to find tor the plaintiff. Its first proposition is that the pleadings of defendants and charge of the court showed that plaintiff was entitled to be allowed its claim for water rates on 219 acres at $6 per acre. This is true, and the court so charged the jury, and the amount was found by the jury in appellant’s favor.
The second proposition asserts that the undisputed evidence showed that appellant fully watered up to and including September 1st, and the irrigating canal was left full for defendants’ benefit, and that the undisputed evidence shows freedom from obligation to pump after that date. The evidence sufficiently shows, we think, that the appellant discharged its obligation as to pumping water into the irrigation canals*, up to September 1st, and that* it then left the canals full of water. But the evidence does not show without dispute that the water in the canals, although they were full on September 1st, was sufficient to water appellees’ crop and bring it to maturity. On the contrary, there was evidence that justified the jury in reaching, as it did, the opposite conclusion. We will not pause to set this evidence out here, but we make this finding from the evidence in the record. The testimony of the appellee was such as to justify the jury in finding that a contract was made by them with appellant to pump after September 1st, and, further, that their rice crop needed water after that date, so that, instead of the evidence indisputably showing freedom of obligation upon the part of appellant to pump after that date, as appellant contends, the jury was justified in finding that such obligation rested upon appellant, and that this obligation was not discharged.
“The court erred in refusing to give plaintiff’s second special instruction, same being a request for a peremptory instruction as against the defendants on their cross-demand, and to find for plaintiff to the amount of $6 per acre for the number of acres within 219 for which they should find that plaintiff had furnished sufficient water to properly irrigate them.”
The court peremptorily instructed the jury to find for appellant in the sum of $6 per acre for each of the 219. This was more favorable to the appellant than the special charge which the court refused to give. The peremptory instruction to find against defendants on their cross-demand was properly refused for the reasons heretofore given.
We have carefully considered all other assignments of error presented by appellant, and are of the opinion that no reversible error is pointed out in any of them. We conclude that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed, and it has been so ordered.
Affirmed.
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