190 Ky. 349 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
In these two actions against the city of Dawson Springs, the first instituted by a partnership composed of Ueo. M. Price and J. M. Price, engaged in the retail drug business under the firm name of Price Brothers; the second by J. M. Price, damages were attempted to be recovered of the city for the flooding, as alleged in each petition, of -the basement of a brick building on Railroad avenue owned by J. M. Price and occupied by Price Brothers as a drug store, by overflows of water and sewage from a sewer which the city negligently constructed and maintained in such defective condition as made it too small and otherwise insufficient - to carry off the sewage' and water from ordinary rainfalls that necessarily ran into and were intended to be carried off by it. The damages amounting to $1,000.00, claimed
The answer filed by the city of Dawson Springs in each action contained two paragraphs; the first traversing the allegations of the petition therein, and the second alleging that the flooding of the building was caused by unusual and extraordinary rainfalls, and that the owners of the drug store and owner of the building were guilty of contributory negligence in failing to make any effort to drain the basement, 'or to remove the merchandise-threfrom, both and either of which, it was alleged, might have been done by the use of ordinary care before the merchandise was reached or injured by the water overflowing the basement. All affirmative matters of the answers were controverted by replies. By agreement of the parties the two actions were submitted and tried together in the court below, the jury returning in each case a verdict for the city. New trials were refused the unsuccessful parties, respectively; and as by these appeals the judgments entered upon the respective verdicts in that court are before us for review and the two appeals have been submitted and considered together, the decision we have reached in each case and the reasons therefor will be set forth in this single opinion.
Two grounds are urged by appellants’ counsel for a reversal of the judgments appealed from: First, that the verdicts are unsupported by and flagrantly against the evidence. Second, that the trial court did not properly instruct the jury. As -bearing on the first of these contentions it should be remarked, that the appellee's ownership of the sewer is put in issue by the pleadings; it being not only denied in each of the answers that it was or is owned by the city, but also that it constructed, maintained or at any time controlled it, and we have rarely found evidence more conflicting than that contained in the record on these issues; that of appellants conducing to prove the city’s construction and ownership of the sewer, and that of appellee as strongly conducing to prove that, except where it crosses the street known as Railroad avenue, the sewer is upon or under privately
Our examination of the record has disclosed no such error. Appellants’ contention regarding the instructions cannot be sustained. It is complained that instruction 1, in each case, though it properly told the jury they should find for the plaintiff if they believed from the evidence appellee negligently constructéd or maintained the sewer in such manner as rendered it insufficient to carry off the water from ordinary rainfalls, it was fatal
Appellants also eomplain of the instructions respecting the measure of 'damages, which authorized no recovery for permanent injury to the drug store building. While such permanent injury seems to have been alleged in the petitions the only showing of injury to the building made by appellants’ evidence was as to the diminution of its rental value, for which reason the damages claimed were properly confined by the instructions to such a recovery. The rule regulating a recovery in this class of actions is, that where the injury complained of is permanent and but one recovery can be had, the depreciation in the market value of the property is allowable, but if, as shown in these cases, the injury to -the building is temporary and can be readily repaired, then the measure of damages is the depreciation in its rental value during the period sued for, if rented .out, or, if occupied by the owner, the diminution in the value of the use of the property caused by the injury. Pickerill v. City of Louisville, 125 Ky. 213; Central Con. Co. v. Pinkert, 122 Ky. 720; C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Robins, 154 Ky. 387; City of Madisonville v. Hardman, 29 R. 253; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Carter, 25 R. 759; Hutchison v. City of Maysville, 30 R. 1173. It being our opinion that no reversible error is shown by the record in either of these cases, the judgment ip each is affirmed.