148 Ky. 366 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Loyd Hensley and his mother, Mary Ann Hensley, owned a tract of 115 acres of land on the north side of Poor Fork in Harlan County, she having a life estate in one-third of the land. The Wasioto & Black Mountain Railroad Company purchased from them the right of way through the tract of land for its railroad and The Callahan Construction Company constructed the railroad as directed by the railroad company. In doing this they diverted the Mary Ann Hensley branch where it intersected the right of way and caused it to flow on the north side of the right of way into another branch lower down Poor Fork Thereupon Loyd Hensley and his mother brought this action against the railroad company and the construction company to recover damages for the diversion of the branch; on the trial of the case, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Loyd Hensley for $200 and in favor of Loyd Hensley and his mother for $300. The court entered a judgment on the verdicts and the defendants appeal.
About ten acres of the 115-acre tract lay south of
The defendants asked the court to instruct the jury that they were not responsible for any injury to the wells. The court refused to give this instruction. The evidence shows that the cut lacked only four feet being as deep as Loyd Hensley’s well and that his mother’s well is fourteen feet below the bottom of the cut. All the circumstances shown by the proof point to the conclusion that the injury to the wells was caused by the cut and not by the diversion of the branch, still, what was the cause of the injury to the wells was a question for the jury and they should have been told that if the injury to the wells was caused by the cut and not by the diversion of the branch, then they should find nothing for the plaintiffs by reason of any injury to the wells. The railroad company acquired with the right, of way, the right to build the railroad upon it and to-make such cuts as were necessary in doing so. No dam-'damages can be recovered for any injury to the wells from the cut. There was no pleading or proof that the cut was made' in a negligent or unusual manner. The sole cause presented by the pleadings is for the diversion of the branch, and the 'evidence is by no means sat
As the measure of damages in a case of this sort is the depreciation in the value of the land by reason of the injury alleged, the witnesses should not be allowed to state how much they think the damages are, but should be required to state the difference in the value of the land and without the injury.
Judgment reversed and case remanded for a new trial.