Riverside Reservoir & Land Co. v. Smylie
Riverside Reservoir & Land Co. v. Smylie
Opinion of the Court
It appears that defendant in error, plaintiff in the trial court, hereinafter called plaintiff, in the year 1906 owned 250 acres, more or less, of low bottom land lying along the South Platte River in Weld County, Colorado, and some 750 acres, more or less, of sand-hill pasture lands adjoining; that plaintiff in error, defendant in the trial court, hereinafter called defendant, constructed the Riverside Reservoir in close proximity to said bottom land, and impounded a
“the waters stored in said Riverside reservoir by defendant have escaped therefrom and seeped, percolated and filtrated through the soil- of said reservoir, and have passed to, and in on and over the lands of plaintiff, covering same with said seepage waters so escaping as aforesaid, and seeping and flooding 250 acres of plaintiff’s said lands, •thereby rendering the same unfit for farming purposes, souring said lands and causing alkili to appear thereon, injuring the improvements thereof, destroying the orchard growing thereon, compelling this plaintiff to construct expensive drainage ditches to remove said seepage waders, and causing a depreciation in the value of said premises in the sum and amount of $12,500.
“That the seeping of said land as aforesaid has also prevented the use of said 250 acres of land by plaintiff for farming purposes for a period of three years to the further damage of plaintiff in the' sum and amount of $12,000.”
Defendant, in its answer, denies any injury to the premises, and alleges a complete settlement of all matters set up in the complaint. The issues were tried to a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the’plaintiff in the sum of $21,750, upon which judgment was accordingly entered.
Plaintiff introduced no evidence whatever in support of the allegation in her complaint, whereby she seeks to recover the sum of $12,000 for a deprivation of the use of said premises for farming purposes for a period of three years, and the verdict of the jury, therefore, awards her $9,250 for a depreciation of the value of the premises'in
We think assignment of error number 23, alleging that the damages allowed by the jury are excessive, is well taken; but as the case may be retried, we do not desire to comment upon the evidence, further than to say that it was very indefinite, uncertain and insufficient upon all the issues submitted to the jury; and as the verdict is excessive and not supported by the weight of the evidence, the judgment based thereon is reversed and the case remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.