87 Neb. 732 | Neb. | 1910
Plaintiff filed his petition in tlie district court alleging that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of this state for the purpose of operating an irrigating canal and selling the water for irrigation; that he is the owner of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter and the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 19, township 18, range 47, in Cheyenne county, “said land being located under and susceptible of irrigation from the defendant’s canal”; that on the 30th day of December, 1897, he purchased the land of defendant with the express understanding that the consideration paid for the land “included payment for two forty-acre tract water rights, the water under said contract to be delivered to plaintiff from said canal, for which water rights plaintiff paid defendant for said lands and said water rights the sum of $1,800,” and in consideration of the further sum of $2 defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff a “water deed,” a copy of which is attached to the petition, and by which defendant agreed to furnish the necessary water for irrigating said land during each and every irrigating season thereafter; that defendant has failed and neglected to furnish any Avater to irrigate said land for the year 1907, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $800, for which judgment is demanded. The defendant answ.ered the petition, denying “that, by reason of defendant’s failure to furnish water to the plaintiff in the year 1907, said plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $800 or in any sum AArlmtever.” The cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, the finding of the court being in favor of the plaintiff, and the assessment of his damages in the sum of $400, for which judgment was rendered. Defendant appeals.
A number of questions are presented for decision, but it is thought they may not arise again in another trial, and one only will be here noticed, and that one is as to the proper measure of damages. The proof showed that, prior
In Crow v. San Joaquin & Kings River C. & I. Co., 130 Cal. 309, the question of the measure of damages for failure to furnish water in compliance with the contract therefor was under consideration. The trial court admitted evidence to the effect that if plaintiff had obtained the water to which he was entitled he would have planted a crop of alfalfa from which he would have realized certain profits, but owing to his failure to get the water he did not plant the alfalfa, and instructed the jury that the
It follows that the judgment of the district court must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings, which is done.
Reversed.