19 Ga. App. 347 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
Foster brought suit against the Towaliga Falls Power Company, and alleged: that the defendant, several years before the filing of the suit, erected a dam across the Towaliga river, in Monroe county, thereby causing “the water in said river to flow up said river and its tributaries for several miles, creating a pond of back water over” a large area of land, and submerging therein
1. In grounds 1, 2', and 3 of the amendment to the motion for
2. Complaint is further made of the ruling of the court in permitting Dr. Phillips, a witness for the plaintiff, to testify that a person living near a pond and breathing bad odors and impure air would be thereby depressed and rendered more susceptible to malarial fever, because his power of resistance to the bite of the mosquito would be lessened or reduced. We think this evidence was admissible under the pleadings in this case. While the medical testimony introduced by the plaintiff was to the effect that only malarial fever could be transmitted by the mosquito, the foul and offensive odors arising from the pond are alleged in the petition to be one of the causes producing the sickness of the plaintiff and his wife. It was competent for him to prove that this condition of the pond, as well as the mosquitoes, either caused, or contributed to cause, the injuries set forth in his petition. The impure air arising from the pond can not, under the evidence in this case, be considered.as the direct and sole cause of his illness, but, according to the testimony of the physician, it contributed to cause the sickness to both the plaintiff and his wife.
3. The charge complained of in ground 5, based upon the physician’s testimony referred to above, was not, for any of the reasons assigned, erroneous, and was properly adjusted to the facts of the case.
4. Grounds 6 and 7 were addressed primarily to the discretion
5. The court charged the jury as follows: “In some torts the entire injury is to the peace, happiness, or feeling of the plaintiff, and, in estimating these damages, no rule for fixing or estimating them can be prescribed, except the enlightened conscience of fair and impartial jurors. The amount to be recovered, if any, is such as shall be assessed by fair and impartial jurors, acting from their enlightened conscience as to what would be fair and just to both parties;” and further charged that “general damages are such as the law presumes to How from the tortious act, and may be recovered without proof of any amount.” The plaintiff in error contends that these instructions are error for the following reasons: (1) that the plaintiff did not claim damages for injury to peace, happiness, or feeling; (2) that there were no acts of aggravation, either in the act or intention, shown by the evidence in the case; and (3) that, under the facts of the case, general damages, in addition to damages for lost time, loss of services of the wife, and medical expenses, were not recoverable. We think they were. In the case of Swift v. Broyles, 115 Ga. 885 (42 S. E. 277, 58 L. R. A. 390), the Supreme Court said: “Undoubtedly, it was [the plaintiff’s] right to receive additional compensation for any annoyance or discomfort occasioned by the air in and about his dwelling-house being permeated with noisome gases and offensive odors discharged from defendant’s fertilizer plant. . . Where there is such a wrongful interference with the comfortable enjoy-' ment of property by a person in possession, no precise rule for ascertaining the damage can be given, as, in the very nature of things, the subject-matter affected is not susceptible of exact measurement; therefore the jury are left to say what, in their judgment, the plaintiff ought to have in money, and what the defendant ought to pay, in view of the discomfort or annoyance to which the plaintiff and his family have been subjected by the nuisance.” See also Jones v. Royster Guano Co., 6 Ga. App. 506 (65 S. E. 361).
6. The court charged the jury as follows: “If you find, from the evidence, that the sickness of the plaintiff and his wife (if you find they were sick) was caused, as alleged in his petition, by malarial fever, caused by the unsanitary condition of said pond, and
The evidence supports the verdict; and since the petition charged that the plaintiff’s injuries resulted not alone from the bite of the particular mosquitoes claimed to cause or transmit malaria, but from the breathing of foul and impure air arising from the pond of the defendant, and due to the decaying vegetable matter negligently left therein by the defendant, the court properly admitted evidence to the effect that impure air and foul and poisonous odors arising from such condition would reduce the power of resistance of one brought constantly in close proximity thereto, and render such person more susceptible to malaria; and the court correctly gave to the plaintiff the benefit of such contention upon the trial of the case. TJnder the pleadings and the evidence the jury were authorized to find that the impure and poisonous air arising from the defendant’s pond, and the bite of the mosquitoes coming therefrom, either caused, or contributed to cause, the fever from which he suffered. There was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.