37 Ala. 20 | Ala. | 1860
The circuit court did not err, in admitting-evidence of the admissions of the defendant Polly. The facts-which the admissions tended to prove were material,.
There is another point presented by the evidence in this record, which we feel it our duty to notice. The record informs us that, although the ditch and levee, from the time they were placed there, diverted the water from its accustomed channel; and although some portions of water, in times of great floods, flowed on the lands of Mrs. McCall, yet no damage was actually done to the lands in controversy, until the year 1857. 'There is a wide difference, between the act of sinking the ditch, and the ultimate result, viz., the flooding of Mrs. McCall’s land. The one was, in itself, rightful, because it was on the lands of Mm under whom defendants derive their title. The use of the ditch and levee, per se, needed no prescriptive right to uphold it*. The consequential result — the injurious flooding of the lands of plaintiff — did not confer a right of action, until
The first charge asked was rightly refused. If given, the defendants would have been entitled to a verdict, notwithstanding the jury may have been convinced by the evidence that the author of the nuisance had given repeated and continuous assurances that the nuisance should be abated ; and notwithstanding the injury may have been, for several years, slight and inconsiderable, and then have become grievous and oppressive..
The second charge asked should have been given. The injury complained of was the damage to plaintiffs land, not the cause which produced that injury. Injury, in legal contemplation, is an effect — not a cause.
Reversed and remanded.