292 P. 782 | Kan. | 1930
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff sought and obtained a judgment against the defendant for damages caused, as plaintiff alleged, by the defendant in discharging oil, salt water and chemicals from its gasoline plant into Willow creek, which flowed through plaintiff’s pasture and operated to poison and kill plaintiff’s live stock kept therein. The judgment rendered was for $500, and the defendant appeals.
The contention of defendant is that there is an absence of substantial testimony to sustain the 'verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court. During the years 1927 and 1928 the plaintiff had cattle and hogs in his pasture through which Willow creek passed. He offered testimony to the effect that water from the defendant’s gasoline plant was turned into a ditch which ran into Willow creek, and that live stock which he placed in the pasture drank water from the creek, and shortly afterwards showed the effects of the poison so that the hair on the animals deadened and several of them died. Some calves of the herd that were taken out of the pasture soon began to revive and fieshen up, while those
Evidence contradictory to that offered by plaintiff was produced by defendant to the efféct that the water was not polluted or of such a character as to injure'or kill animals that drank of it; that if the plaintiff’s animals sickened and died it was the result of other causes. There is and can be no controversy over the proposition that anyone sustaining substantial injury to his live stock by the pollution of a stream flowing through his pasture from which the live stock drank the polluted water may maintain an action against the party causing the pollution and recover any actual damages thereby sustained. (Gilmore v. Salt Co., 84 Kan. 729, 115 Pac. 541; McDaniel v. City of Cherryvale, 91 Kan. 40, 136
The judgment is affirmed.