130 N.C. 746 | N.C. | 1902
This case is practically identical in its essential features with that of Mullen v. Canal Co., at this term, wherein the legal principles applicable to such cases are fully discussed. In fact, it is against the same defendant, and arises out of the same general work, the deepening and widening of the canal in 1898 and 1899. It is in evidence that the “sweat and lead ditch,” the obstruction of which caused much of the injury, had been in continuous use for both purposes for more than fifty years. One of the witnesses, Hughes, testified as follows: “That he has known the land for fifty years, and it has been cultivated for the past fifty years; that the plaintiff’s land lies about twelve hundred yards along the canal; that the defendant in widening its canal dug out mud, sand and water and threw it over the land of the plaintiffs, filled up the sweat ditch, which is also a lead ditch on the farm, and threw mud, sand and water back on the land sixty feet, and that it ruined the land back to the second ditch, which was two hundred and fifty to three hundred yards back from the canal. That the mud and sand was piled upon the lands and bn the bank of the canal from six to eight feet high. That it injured forty acres of land one-half its value. That the land along the canal was worth fifty dollars per acre. That he had sold part of the same land for one hundred dollars per lot — 15 feet by 150 feet. That because of the bank thrown up and washing the sand and mud on the land, it is now worth but very little or nothing, and can not be sold for lots. That part of the tract of land is in the village of South Mills. The
1. That the defendant had a right to fill up its sweat ditch along the line of the canal, and the filling of this ditch by the defendant did no wrong to the plaintiffs. The jury will assess no damages on that account.
2. That the plaintiffs had no right to cut ditches through their land into the sweat ditch of the defendant, and the defendant, by stopping the drainage of these ditches into its sweat ditch did no1 wrong to the plaintiffs, and the jury shall give no damages on that account.
These instructions were properly refused by the Court, and there is no error in that part of the charge set out in the record of which the defendant can complain. In the face of such uncontradicted evidence and the resulting verdict of the jury, we can not concur in the contentions of the defendant upon any principle of law known to us. The judgment of the Court below is
Affirmed.