116 Wis. 592 | Wis. | 1903
After a careful examination of tbe evidence in tbis case, we are led to tbe conclusion that notwithstanding tbe special verdict of eleven questions and tbe numerous exceptions there was no material issue in tbe case, except tbe question of damages, as to which there was any conflict of evidence. That tbe bridge was inadequate to carry off tbe waters which might reasonably be expected to flow to it,— meaning, of course, tbe waters with their customary and expected accompaniment of silt and driftwood; that thereby, on July 14th, the plaintiff’s lands were flooded so as to do damage as the natural and probable result thereof; that the freshet on that date was neither unusual nor extraordinary,— all these appear without dispute from the testimony of witnesses, offered both by plaintiff and defendant, and the court would have been justified either in answering said questions in favor of the plaintiff, or in directing a verdict in his favor, submitting only the question of damages.
Erom this view it of course results that errors of instruction in submitting any such questions are immaterial. Thus the industry of the trial court in describing' to the jury the defendant’s legal duty with reference to maintenance of bridges across watercourses, while wholly unnecessary to enable an answer to the simple question of fact submitted to them by the second question, cannot have prejudiced the defendant ; for the negative answer to that question which the ■jury did give should have been ordered by the trial court.
■ An assignment of error predicated upon the failure of the 'court to inquire whether the quantity of driftwood carried against the bridge on July 14th was unusual and extraordinary is disposed of by the same consideration. The testimony may be searched in vain for anything to support an
Another assignment of error, for that it was not left to the jury to find whether damage ought to have been anticipated by a person of ordinary intelligence and prudence, is equally without foundation. If such element be at all necessary to establish the liability of one who obstructs a watercourse for the damage resulting from overflow in the absence of extraordinary freshet, it certainly is matter of common knowledge that the setting back of water onto the low lying farm lands above an obstruction is likely to cause damage. It is not necessary to recovery that the particular damage caused should be within the anticipation of a reasonably intelligent and prudent person. Mauch v. Hartford, 112 Wis. 40, 60, 87 N. W. 816; Meyer v. M. E. R. & L. Co., ante, p. 336, 93 N. W. 6.
Upon the only remaining assignment of error, which is substantially to the effect that the court erred in not refusing to allow the jury to find any permanent damages, counsel for appellant devotes considerable space to the discussion of the probable effect of two other storms, which as he claims, were extraordinary and unusual, one occurring in June, 1899, and the other in October, 1900; apparently insisting that the separation of the damage done by the storm of July 14, 1900, from that caused by the other storms was pure conjecture. An examination of the evidence refiders this position so obviously untenable that we are somewhat at a loss to understand appellant’s insistence thereon. Doubtless if the plaintiff had sought to predicate permanent damages to the land upon a comparison between the conditions existing before any of these storms and those existing after all of them there would have been force to the argument that the jury could not say what part of the damage was due to one storm
No error prejudicial to,appellant is presented by the record.
By the Gourt. — Judgment affirmed.