delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs sued the city for grading and filling certain streets, by means of which the water was set back upon their lots, to their great damage, etc. The issues were submitted to a jury, who found for defendant, and the plaintiffs charge certain errors committed upon the trial:
1. After the jury was called, the plaintiffs moved for a special venire for jurors who owned property within the town of St. Charles, inasmuch as some of those called were residents and taxpayers of the town, and hence interested. The motion was overruled, but had it been made in season it should have been granted. (Fine v. St. Louis Public Schools,
3. The plaintiffs claim that the verdict should have been set aside because of its character. It is as follows : “ Believing in the lot is no living stream, we, the jury, find for the defendant.”
The evidence tended to prove that a living stream ran across the plaintiffs’ lot, which was dammed up by the improvement, although it varied in regard to the character of the stream. It was, however, clearly shown that the water ran in it for most of
