101 S.W.2d 440 | Ark. | 1937
Appellees, Henry and Jamison, filed separate suits against appellants to recover damages to their separate properties caused by blasting rock from a quarry near their lands which resulted in a disturbance of the rock and earth strata under their lands in such a way as to drain or dry up a well on each of their properties. The cases were consolidated and trial to a jury resulted in separate verdicts and judgments for $750, for each appellee, and a special finding by the jury that the damage was temporary. The charge as laid in each complaint was, that appellants negligently, carelessly and willfully used excessive charges of explosives in loosening *444 and removing rock from the quarry so that the structure, rock wall, and water table underlying their premises were cracked, broken and dislodged so as to drain the water from the wells, and divert the flow of the underground water under their lands away from its natural channel and reservoir, destroying their water supply. Appellants denied they were guilty of negligence or that they committed any willful injury on appellees or that they were responsible in any way for the damages alleged. The case was submitted to the jury on the theory of negligence or no negligence in the use of excessive charges.
Appellants first say the verdicts are not supported by substantial evidence for the reason they were not negligent in being unable to foresee that the blasting at the quarry would have damaged the Jamison well, located some 1,200 feet therefrom or the Henry well located some 600 feet therefrom. The question was not whether they could actually foresee the particular damage, but whether, as reasonably prudent persons, they might anticipate some damage to adjacent property by the use of excessive charges of a highly dangerous substance. There is ample authority to the effect that under such circumstances the landowner may recover damages without proof of negligence, even though negligence is laid in the complaint. Patrick v. Smith,
We agree with appellants, however, that the damages assessed were excessive. The jury found, by a special verdict, that the injury was temporary, which we interpret to mean that the wells can be rehabilitated; or other wells sunk with good results. The mining engineer, sponsored by appellees, testified that a water supply could be found lower down and, in his opinion, the lower water veins have not been disturbed. Others in the same vicinity whose wells were adversely affected by the blasting got good results by going deeper, and we think the jury has found they may do likewise by finding only temporary damage. The proof shows that new wells may be drilled at a cost of from $1 to $2.50 per foot. A number of disinterested witnesses, who showed knowledge of land values, testified that the difference in value of appellees' properties with and without water is from $150 to $200. We are, therefore, of the opinion that judgments in excess of $200 each are not warranted by the evidence. The judgments will be so modified, and as modified, affirmed.
HUMPHREYS and MEHAFFY, JJ., dissent as to reduction of judgment. *446