114 Ky. 732 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
Appellant and appellee are farmers living on Knob Lick creek, in Daviess county. It is a flat country, and the stream seems to be a sluggish one. Appellant’s land is lower than appellee’s, and lies north of it, between appellee’s farm and the creek. .To the west of appellee’s land is a tract known in the record as the “Mattingly Land.”
The instruction which is chiefly complained of is in these words: “If the jury believe from the'evidence that the ditch leading from the Mattingly land over the defendant’s land to plaintiff’s land had been constructed and maintained continually for a period of fifteen years or more next before the contract or agreement between the plaintiff and defendant for a continuation of said ditch through the plaintiff’s land to Knob Lick creek (if they believe from the evidence there was such an agreement), under a claim of right, then in that event the defendant is not liable to plaintiff for any damage that plaintiff may have sustained by water flowing through said ditch, though he failed to comply with the agreement to keep the ditch open on plaintiff’s land.” This instruction was erroneous. The contract between Clark and Raleigh was admitted by both parties. It had been carried out by them for a number of years. After getting the benefit of this contract, Clark must take it with the burden. He can not be permitted to say that he had a right to maintain the Mattingly ditch, for, whatever his rights may have been, he waived them, rather than take
As the case must go back for another trial, it is necessary for us to determine whether instruction No. 3, which is objected to, properly defines the measure of damages, for it is to the interest of the parties that on the next trial the case may be fairly submitted to the jury. The thing complained of here is Clark’s failure to comply with his agreement and keep open the north and south ditch; also the east and west ditch, which he dug on his own land. The rule is elementary that a party suing for damages from the breach of a contract can only recover such damages as naturally and proximately flow from the breach. When Clark failed to keep open the, ditch across Raleigh’s land, Raleigh might have opened it, and recovered the cost of doing the work which Clark had agreed to do, but had not done. The measure of damages for the non-performance of work of this sort is ordinarily the cost of the work, and not the loss which may result to the other party as a consequence of the work’s not being done. Thus in Miller v. Trustees, 7 Greenl., 51, 20 Am. Dec., 341, the court
By the third instruction the court, in substance, told the jury that, if they found for the plaintiff the criterion of damages was the value of the crops lost by him by reason of the flooding of the land, or a fair compensation for the injury .to the crops, and the depreciation of the rental value of the land that was not in crop. The court should have modified this instruction to the effect that Raleigh could not recover for any damages which he might have avoided by ordinary care, and that for Clark’s failure to keep open the north and south ditch on Raleigh’s land the meas
Judgment reversed, and canse remanded for a new trial.