135 Mo. App. 661 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This action was instituted in the circuit court of Butler county. The amended petition upon which the case Avas tried, after setting out that the respondent is the OAvner of lands described in it, and that he Avas such owner at the time of the institution of the suit, avers that Cane Creek is a natural watercourse and a running stream, with well-defined channels and banks, and that it runs through and along the eastern side of the lands of the respondent, the lands bordering on the Avest bank of Cane Creek' for a distance of about a mile. It is then averred that the appellant, is a railroad corporation, organized under the laws of this State and OAvning a line of road running
Respondent further testified that oh this occasion, the water ran through the drain or slough, and when it got to the railroad embankment that backed it up and caused it to overflow his land; that the railroad embankment finally gave Avay from the pressure of the Avater and then the water left his land; that since said high-water and damage the railroad company has put in
Witness called on part of the respondent testified substantially to the same effect, except that none of them gave any testimony as to the value of the fencing or corn alleged, to have been destroyed, nor to the value of the soil alleged to have been washed away. At the close of all the testimony appellant asked an instruction as follows:
“I. The court instructs the jury that, under the pleadings and all the evidence offered by both plaintiff and defendant, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and you will return a verdict for the defendant.”
This was refused, the appellant duly saving exception. At the request of the respondent, the court gave two instructions as follows:
“I. The court instructs the jury that if you believe and find from the testimony, that the streams, drains or sloughs described in plaintiff’s petition were watercourses within the meaning of and as defined by instruction number two, and that the defendant in constructing its said railroad, so negligently and carelessly constructed its said railroad as to wholly or in part obstruct the natural flow of the water in said streams, sloughs or drains and thereby caused the waters in the said streams, sloughs or drains to be dammed or backed up and thereby causing the same to overflow plaintiff’s land and that in consequence thereof plaintiff was damaged or injured as alleged in the petition, then plaintiff is entitled to recover all such damages, not exceeding one thousand dollars, as you may believe from the testimony was caused either directly or approximately by the said careless and negligent acts of the defendant in the construction of its said railroad as aforesaid.
The appellant duly saved exceptions to the giving of these instructions and the jury returning a verdict in favor of respondent for $325, appellant filed motions for new trial and in arrest, which being overruled, it duly perfected its appeal to this court.
The abstract of the testimony presented by appellant is not very satisfactory, in that it hardly enables us to see exactly what took place at the trial of the cause as it took place. But as no exceptions are made to it as an abstract, and no additional abstract has been filed by respondent, we are compelled to do the best we can with it as the case is not here on a full transcript. Talcing up the point made-that it was error to allow respondent to state what the damage to the soil was — that he should have shown the value of the soil washed away, and not merely state the amount of damage, we notice it appears in the abstract of the testimony of the respondent that he testified, so the abstract sets out, “That there was about 320 rods of the fence destroyed, worth thirty-five cents per rod, making $112; that he lost four or five hundred bushels of corn worth fifty cents per bushel, say four hundred and fifty, making $225; that the soil was washed away from two or three acres of his land and that he was damaged by this washing of the soil in the sum of $500.” The abstract then proceeds to set out, “To this question and answer as to the damage to the land, the defendant objected and moved to strike out the question and answer, for
Exception to the refusal of a peremptory instruction is urged here, based on the claim that the petition lays the injury to the property to the faulty construction of the bridge over Cane Creek, and to the fact that the bridge was insufficient to let the water through and that this had caused them to back up on respondent’s property and had thereby injured it, and it is claimed that there is no evidence whatever that the bridge had anything to do with the overfloAv; that the only evidence is that the overflow was caused by the soil embankment. That is true. It is further claimed by the learned counsel for the appellant, that Avhen one alleges certain causes to have produced the injury, he is bound by these allegations and must’ recover on those grounds or not at all. That is also good law. But reading the petition on which the case was tried, we find that it distinctly counts both on the bridge and on the embankment as the cause of the damage. Assuming that there was no proof that the bridge alone caused it but that it was caused by the embankment, it is certainly clearly set out in ’ the petition and established by the evidence, that the embankment was one of the causes
The main objection of the appellant, however, turns on the failure of the court to give a peremptory instruction at the close of the testimony, directing a verdict in favor of appellant, and the argument before us on this rests on the claim that the road was built by the Southern Missouri .& Arkansas Railway Co., and-not by the appellant, and that before the appellant could be made liable for the maintenance of the nuisance ■ or the obstruction, knowledge of the fact that it was a nuisance or an obstruction, should have been brought home to it. There is no question whatever as to the correctness of this contention as a .proposition of law. It has been so decided by this court and by our Supreme Court in several cases. [See Bobb v. Bobb, 7 Mo. App. 501; Graves v. Railroad, 133 Mo. App. 91; Wayland v. Railroad, 75 Mo. 548; Silver v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 79, l. c. 91; George v. Railroad, 40 Mo. App. 433, l. c. 443.] An examination of each .of these cases, however, shows that either the petition distinctly averred the fact of notice to defendant in cases where the road was being operated by it, but built by another, when of course the fact of notice was in issue, or, if that was not alleged, then the fact of notice or no notice was distinctly before the court and jury and passed on by appropriate instructions ; or the lack of proof of notice was distinctly brought before the trial court by objection specifically founded on that, or, in the motion for new trial or in some other Avay that fact was clearly called to the attention of the trial court, and distinctly made and passed upon. That was not done in this case. •We have read the abstract carefully and are compelled to say, that placing ourselves in the position of the trial court or using that abstract as a mirror refecting what occurred