56 Iowa 470 | Iowa | 1881
I. The petition alleges that the defendant’s railroad is located upon plaintiff’s farm, and crosses two sloughs thereon, the water of which in the natural state was clear and pure, and ran over a -grassy bottom; that in the construction of the railroad one of the sloughs was dammed, and the water thereof diverted from its natural course, and conducted for a long distance through loose sand and dirt into the other slough, over which a culvert was constructed;
The defendant in its answer alleges that the railroad was constructed in 1873, and that the defendant became the owner thereof in 1876, and denies any negligence or unskillfulness in the construction of the road. It is averred that if any cause of action ever existed, it accrued more than five years before the suit was commenced, and is, therefore, barred by the statute of limitations.
II. The plaintiff’ testified that his farm “ without the railroad constructed so as to dam up the slough ” would be worth twenty-five dollars per acre. He was then asked the present value of the farm with the railroad constructed as it is, without a culvert over the slough. Objections to this question were overruled, and plaintiff answered that it is worth twenty-one dollars per acre. The admission of this evidence is the ground of the first objection to the judgment urged by defendant’s counsel. It is insisted that the evidence should have been limited to the value of the land immediately before and after the road was built in order to show plaintiff’s damages. But the injury was not sustained upon the completion of the road, and did not occur till the expiration of three years after. The' evidence could not have been directed to the time immediately before and after the building of the road, for no injury had then occurred.
III. It is further insisted that the claim of plaintiff is based upon the injury to the use of the land, and not to the land itself. We do not. so understand the pleadings. The injury complained of is alleged to be a permanent injury to plaintiff’s farm.
Y. Certain instructions are objected to in the thiz’d point-of counsel’s az-gument, on the grozznd that plaintiff does not claizn to recover for the negligent construction of the road. We uzzdez’stand the pleadings to raise the issue of negligence. The record fails to establish the fact upon which counsel’s objection is based.
We have considered all questions discussed by defendant’s counsel, and discover no error in the record. The judgment is
Affirmed.