86 N.J.L. 563 | N.J. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff owned four contiguous city lots lying east of Bloomfield avenue, in the city of Newark, in what is known as the Silver Lake section. The defendant owned a large tract of land lying west of Bloomfield avenue. A natural water course, draining an area of about four hundred and fifty acres, flowed through the lands of the defendant, and, passing through a culvert under Bloomfield avenue, flowed through the Silver Lake section on the east of Bloomfield avenue, running through and over plaintiff’s lots in its course. In the Silver Lake section the land was low and marshy, and the. stream, after leaving the culvert on the east side of Bloomfield avenue, seeped over and through the section in many little streams.
Plaintiff’s predecessor in title, who owned two hundred and thirty lots in the Silver Lake section, including the four lots in question, which he subsequently conveyed to plaintiff, undertook to develop the Silver Lake basin, and to that end dug a ditch five feet wide and five feet deep, into which the surface water coming under Bloomfield avenue was diverted. The ditch, in a part of its course, ran along one side of the lots in question, and then, making a right angle turn, ran along the real’ of the lots. Of the five feet of the width of the ditch, two and one-half feet lay on the lots in question, and the other two and one-half feet lay on the lots adjoining — -that is, the boundary line of the lots was the middle line of the ditch.
The section developed; streets were opened; houses were built; and the water which had formerly spread over and flowed through the lake bottom was of necessity confined to the artificial ditch.
It was defendant’s contention that at and immediately prior to the time of the alleged wrong for which plaintiff’s
The complaint contains three counts. The first alleges damages to have been suffered by the plaintiff by reason of an increased flow of water over bis lands. The second, that defendant entered the premises of the plaintiff and then and there dug out a large quantity of his land, of the value of $1,000, and took and carried away the same and converted and disposed thereof to its own use. The third, that defendant entered the premises of the plaintiff, and with feet, in walking, trod down, tramped upon, consumed and spoiled the grass, shrubbage and land of the plaintiff.
.Defendant, in its answer, denied the averments of the complaint, and, in ¡justification, pleaded that, without breach of the peace, it entered upon the plaintiff’s lands, dug and cleaned out the bed and channel of the stream sufficiently for the waters to flow freely and naturally down the same.
The case was tried at the Essex Circuit, and a verdict was rendered and judgment entered against the defendant for $329.40; from which judgment the defendant appealed.
The court charged the jury that the measure of damages, if the plaintiff was entitled io recover, would he the difference between the value of the lots immediately before and immediately after the damage was done. This formula was taken from the language of the charge of the trial court in Manda v. Orange, 77 N. J. L. 285, as set forth in the opinion of Mr.
The motion to nonsuit as to all the counts was properly denied; as to the first, because the evidence showed that the plaintiff was entitled at least to nominal damages; as to the second, because the plaintiff ivas entitled to substantial damages; as to the third, because the plaintiff was entitled to nominal damages.
Appellant objected to the overruling of questions put to the witness Maioram as to the contents of a deed. Upon elementary principles the judge was right in excluding the evidence. The instrument speaks for itself. The questions were properly overruled, as they amounted to an attempt to introduce, secondary evidence of the contents of a writing without laying a proper foundation therefor. Cumberland Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Giltinan, 48 N. J. L. 495.
The judge also overruled the question as to whether improvements erected on the Silver Lake district (in which plaintiff’s land was situate) tended to prevent the natural flow of water from the highland clown through the district. The objection to the question was, that plaintiff conlcl not he charged with improvements made hjr others in the locality. We think the ruling was right. The defendant was the upper and the plaintiff the lower riparian owner, and the question at issue, as to damages resulting from an overflow on the latter’s land, was one between the plaintiff and defendant, not involving conditions for which third parties were responsible.
The judge also overruled questions as to the observation of a witness of the flow of water in and after storms. The ruling is objected to. The court ruled that the examination was improper, as the only permissible question on that head was,
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the court below will be affirmed
For affirmance — The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Garrison, Stvayze, Trenchard, Parker, Bergen, Minturn, Kalisch, Black, Bogert, Vredenburgh, Heppenheimer, Williams, JJ. 14,
For reversal — Yene.