214 P. 641 | Mont. | 1923
Lead Opinion
prepared the opinion for the court.
The plaintiff in this cause seeks to recover damages from the defendant company on account of certain alleged negligent acts which resulted in flooding and depositing on the property of the plaintiff tailings, filth and debris. The district court, at the close of the evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, dismissed the case as to the defendant Beaudin. This ruling of the court has not been challenged, and the case will be considered without reference to this defendant. At the close of all of the evidence in the case, upon- motion of the defendant company, the court directed the jury to return a verdict in its favor on the issues involved. The appeal to this court is from the judgment entered upon the verdict in favor of the defendant company.
During the years 1915 to 1920, inclusive, the defendant company owned and operated a mining, concentrating, and smelting plant located approximately one and one-half miles east of the Harrison Avenue bridge in the city of Butte and about one-half mile from Silver Bow Creek. From November, 1915, to and inclusive of the month of January, 1920, the company by means of ditches conveyed to and dumped into Silver Bow Creek its tailings and refuse from its mining, milling and smelting operations at a point approximately 1,800 feet east of the Harrison Avenue bridge. In January and February, 1920, a dam was constructed along the banks of Silver Bow Creek for the purpose of collecting the tailings and refuse then carried from the plant into the creek, and was used for such purpose until about the 20th of March following, at which time the dam was abandoned and the tailings collected at another place. The plaintiff owned certain property adjacent to the Harrison Avenue bridge, and in the years 1916 and 1917 constructed an apartment house thereon, and approaching within fifteen feet of Silver Bow Creek. On June 28, 1920, between 7 and 8 o’clock P. M., there occurred a heavy fall of rain in the vicinity of the
All assignments of error worthy of discussion may be disposed of in two general propositions, namely: Was it necessary for plaintiff to prove more than one of the several alleged acts of negligence? Was the evidence introduced sufficient to require the submission of the ease to the jury upon any theory alleged?
As to the first proposition, we believe that the following general rule may be deduced from the discussion of the necessity of proving all of several acts of negligence charged in the complaint contained in the decisions in the cases of Forsell v. Pittsburgh, & Montana Copper Co., 38 Mont. 403, 100 Pac. 218, and Frederick v. Hale, 42 Mont. 153, 112 Pac. 70. When plaintiff in an action states several distinct acts of negligence, any one of which is, when proved, shown to be a proximate cause of the injury, his action will not be defeated by failure to prove all, and he may recover on proof of one or more of the acts of negligence complained of; but, where the injury upon which the suit for damages is based is alleged to be the result of several acts of negligence, no one of which however is charged to have caused it alone, proof of a single one of the acts will not suffice.
Plaintiff relies upon Frederick v. Hale, supra, to sustain his contention that proof of any one of the alleged acts of negligence was sufficient to entitle him to recover. We cannot regard that case as an authority for any other than the general propositions of law hereinbefore stated. In Frederick v. Hale the court said: “The complaint in this action charges negligence with respect to the upper reservoir, but it also discloses beyond question that it was the breaking of the dam at the lower reservoir which caused plaintiff’s injury. The ' plaintiff does not charge directly nor indirectly that but for the negligent construction, maintenance, or use of the upper reservoir the lower dam would not have given way.” There is no suggestion in the pleadings in this ease that the damage would have resulted if the channel had not been partially filled, and likewise no suggestion that damages would have resulted even with the filled condition of the channel if the dam had not broken. The distinction between the two cases is therefore apparent.
Was the evidence sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to have his case submitted to the jury? The defendant contends that there was no evidence of negligent construction of the dam; that there was no proof of any substantial amount of water in the reservoir on June 28, prior to the storm; that, if the water accumulated in the reservoir and caused it to give way, it was because of an unusual and unprecedented
The defendant strenuously urges that, inasmuch as the evi denee fails to show that substantial and large volumes of water were in the pond on June 28, accumulated and
It is contended by respondents that the storm was unusual and unprecedented. There is substantial evidence to the contrary, and the disputed question was one for the jury under proper instructions from the court. The plaintiff’s theory is that the dam was negligently constructed and maintained, incapable of sustaining the burden of an average or heavy flow of water, and that the defendant was advised and many times warned of this fact, and' warned of the damage which had been done by breaks in the dam, and the possibility of great damage which might be done in the future. The law seems well established in this state to the effect that, even if the damages are occasioned by a combination of defendant’s negligence and an unprecedented storm, the defendant can be held liable if his alleged negligence is established as a proximate cause of the injury (Frederick v. Hale, supra); and, if the act of God alone would not have produced
We agree with counsel’s contention that the evidence submitted is to the effect that, had the channel at the Harrison avenue bridge had the same carrying capacity on June 28 that it had in 1916 and prior thereto, it would not have taken care of the flood waters on June 28 without damage to plaintiff’s property. This conclusion, however, does not permit us to indulge in the presumption that it would not have taken care of the water on June 28 had it been permitted to flow down the stream unobstructed and without the added volume of the contents of the reservoir. The evidence discloses that the water which flooded the plaintiff’s premises came down the stream in a wall, bearing on its crest portions of the defendant company’s dam. This condition of the water might easily have produced the flood and damage when, if the stream had been unmolested by the breaking of the reservoir, the water might have passed without damage to the plaintiff.
Finally, defendant contends that there is no evidence to sus tain plaintiff’s claim that the defendant company has filled or contributed to the filling of the channel of the creek. The parties concede that the channel has filled very rapidly during a period of years prior to 1920. The plaintiff testified that
Neil O’Donnell, a witness for the defendant, who had been engaged for a period of four or five years to watch the creek bed, and take measurements, testified that there was some leakage at times from the Butte and Superior dump into the creek, and in 1917 the defendant company was discharging black dark tailings, concentrates containing slimes, tailings and iron. He never made a test of them, but collected samples which settled in jars, and the settlings were slimes, rough tailings, kinds of concentrates, and there was iron in them. He could not tell the amount of the tailings deposited in the creek by the defendant company during the time he was there, but they were coming down at all times except when the mill was shut down. The color of the East Butte tailings was dark blue, consisting of siliceous tailings,
The witness Robertson, for the defendant, testified that flotation tailings as sent ont of the mill by the East Butte Copper Company were very, very fine, and the velocity of the water in Silver Bow Creek was such that the tailings of that character could not settle. The tailings were very nearly as fine as talcum powder; eighty-five per cent of them would pass through a 100-mesh screen, and about sixty per cent of them through a 200-mesh screen. The creek above Harrison avenue bridge spread out in small channels and bars; the velocity was not very great. In some places the water was not very deep. P. F. Minister, mining engineer for defendant company, testified that the East Butte Company put no mill tailings in Silver Bow Creek; no tailings from the East Butte whatever except flotation tailings ever got into Silver Bow Creek. East Butte tailings are light, like talcum powder, the result of oil flotation. Witness Rothwell, for defendant, testified as to the.method of reduction, and put some tailings through three screens. He was certain that no tailings of the East Butte Company would sink in the running waters of Silver Bow Creek.
The witness Strassburger testified that the fall of the creek at Harrison Avenue was about one and one-half inches to the one hundred feet. He had taken samples of the creek-bed and found that approximately ten per cent would pass through a 100-mesh screen, and consisted of fine dark-colored silt, but could not detect any flotation tailings. He was quite sure there was a lot of mine tailings along the creek, and there might be some in the creek. A number of exhibits were introduced showing samples of the creek-bed.
Plaintiff, testifying in rebuttal, said he saw some of the samples produced in court by the defendant taken, and that they were taken in sand banks. During the sixty days pre
Many witnesses corroborated the plaintiff in Ms testimony with reference to the source of the material which had been deposited in the channel of the creek. The defendant, aside from producing two witnesses who testified that the tailings from defendant’s plant would not sink in running water, produced a number of samples taken from the channel of the creek, also a sample of the tailings produced at the plant. The samples taken from the creek bed are coarse in size and yellow in color, while the samples from the plant are very fine in character as to size, and blue in color. The defendant contends that this physical difference in the character of the samples, coupled with the evidence of the two witnesses to the effect that defendant’s tailings would not sink in running water, and another to the effect that the defendant company had produced nothing but flotation tailings, is sufficient to bring this case within the rule of this court, declared in Casey v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 60 Mont. 56, 198 Pac. 141, wherein it is said: “Where physical conditions # # * point so unerringly to the truth as to leave no room for a contrary conclusion based on reason or common sense, the mere fact that testimony is introduced in conflict with them is not sufficient to make a case for the jury.” We think, however, the facts in this case do not bring the defendant within the rule there announced. We have no actual demonstration in evidence here which convinces us that flotation tailings will not sink in the runmng waters of Silver Bow Creek, only the testimony of two witnesses that they will not, and many witnesses that they will and do, clearly producing a question of fact for the
We therefore recommend that the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court for a new trial.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
Opinion:
On motion for rehearing counsel for respondents have filed an elaborate printed brief, in which they contend with great earnestness that the opinion of the court is errone
After alleging “that in the year 1920 the defendants constructed a so-called pond and impounding dams or reservoirs for the purpose of impounding the tailings, water, and filth from the properties of the defendant,” with other allegations showing that said dams and reservoirs were so carelessly and negligently constructed that they were not sufficiently strong to withstand any average or heavy flow of water, the complaint states in the first part of paragraph 8: “That on the 28th day of June, 1920, many thousands of gallons of water and thousands of tons of filth and tailings were in said pond, and that on said day occurred a rainstorm which caused some water to flow into the said pond, and that the banks and dams of the said pond gave way, and the contents thereof, composed of tailings, water, and filth, were caused to flow towards, upon, and into the property of the plaintiff.” Later in paragraph 8 it is alleged: “That by reason of the fact that the defendant, the East Butte Copper Mining Company, had theretofore caused the creek bed of the said Silver Bow creek to be filled in and raised with tailings from its properties, and because of the breaking of the said impounding pond, the waters and tailings from said pond were prevented from flowing through the creek, but were caused to flow upon plaintiff’s property in a large volume.” And counsel say that: “As a result of overlooking the foregoing allegations the opinion erroneously holds that it was immaterial whether at and immediately prior to the time the cloudburst commenced the pond contained many thousands of gallons of water, or a large volume of water of such extent, depth, weight and pressure as to constitute a dangerous instrumentality of destruction, if, being prevented from flowing down the channel of Silver Bow creek by reason of the
We think counsel fail to comprehend the full scope and meaning of the above-quoted charging matter from the first part of paragraph 8. Counsel place undue emphasis upon the phrase “many thousands of gallons of water,” and apparently overlook the fact that this phrase is used conjunctively with what follows. The pleading is, “many thousands of gallons of water and thousands of tons of filth and tailings were in said pond.” Later on comes the allegation that on the day in question a rainstorm occurred which caused some water to flow into the pond, and that when the banks and dams of the pond gave way the contents thereof, “composed of tailings, water, and filth,” were caused “to flow towards, upon, and into the property of the plaintiff.”
It is apparent that according to the allegations, if it had not been for the filled-in condition of the bed of the creek, which condition was caused by the defendant company, the creek channel would have carried away the tailings, water and filth; and in view of this it is not material- as to how the water came to be in the pond on that day. When this is considered, it seems clear that the allegations of the complaint, when read together, are not susceptible of the meaning counsel gives them. Thus analyzed, in our opinion, there is no inconsistency in the opinion of the court. Nor does the opinion depart from the rule asserted in Forsell v. Pittsburgh & Montana Copper Co., 38 Mont. 403, 100 Pac. 218, as counsel assert.
The motion for a rehearing is denied.