Stone v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.
Stone v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Action to recover damages on account of the alleged overflow of plaintiffs’ lands and the destruction of their crops.
Plaintiffs allege in their petition that they were joint owners of a growing crop of corn on the east half of the southwest quarter, section 21, township 27, range 15, of the county of Scott in the year 1905. That said land lies in a bottom, the general course of which is from north to south and is from three-fourths to a mile wide. That the drain in said lands was through three depressions, one along the east side, one on the west side and one through the center, with elevations between said depressions preventing the water from crossing from one to the other. That the flow of water is from the north to the south with sufficient fall to carry off the rainfall; that in the center depression a large canal has been constructed and operated by a ditching district sufficient to drain all said lands. That for many years defendant has maintained a levee embankment on which to operate its railroad just south and through section 21, township 27, and range 15, and by means thereof did dam up and obstruct the flow of the water,-and did neglect, fail and refuse to open up drains and ditches where the embankment obstructed the water to the large canal, and by reason of such failure caused plaintiffs’
Answer was a general denial. Trial by jury, verdict for plaintiffs in the sum of two hundred dollars, motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment overruled, and defendant has appealed, assigning as error the action of the court in admitting any testimony under the petition, in admitting incompetent testimony on the part of plaintiffs, in refusing instructions one and two in behalf of defendant, and in giving instruction number one offered on the part of plaintiffs on the measure of damages.
The evidence on the part of plaintiffs tended to show that they had certain land on the north side of the right of way of defendant cultivated in corn in the year 1905; that this land was low, but that it had a general drainage toward the south, and that there were two sloughs which carried the water away before the building of defendant’s railroad; that when the railroad was built the grade of the road obstructed these sloughs and caused the water to cover more land than it had covered before, and that sometime prior to 1905, a large drainage ditch had been dug through this land which passed through under the defendant’s track at a place where a trestle had been constructed and that if defendant had dug ditches along the north side of its right of way the land where the corn was growing would have been properly drained, and that by reason of the failure to construct those ditches some twenty or thirty acres of plain • tiffs’ corn was flooded when it Avas about “hip high” and destroyed. The evidence also tended to show the value of this crop at the time of its destruction. The evidence on the part of defendant tended to show that the construction of ditches along the right of way would not have drained all of this land and also that the destruction of this crop of corn was caused by the excessive rains of that season and not by the failure of defendant to ditch its right of way.
The objection is also made to this petition that it does not allege any damages and for that reason is fatally defective. The allegation of the petition on that question is as follows: “And by reason of such failure caused plaintiffs’ land to be flooded and crop destroyed to their damage and in the sum of eight hundred, for which sum and costs they pray for judgment.” We think this allegation sufficient against a general objection to the introduction of testimony. The omission of the word dollars was purely a clerical error and defendant was clearly not misled thereby, but he could not read this petition without concluding that plaintiffs were seeking to recover as damages the sum of eight hundred dollars, and this contention must be ruled against appellant.
It is next contended that error was committed in permitting witnesses for plaintiffs to testify as to their judgment as to the amount of damages suffered. While the form of some of the questions was objectionable and standing alone might be in error, yet when the testimony of the plaintiffs and other witnesses to whom these ques
Objection is made to instruction number one on the part of plaintiffs for the reason that it does not state specifically what is the measure of damages. It concludes with this language: “Then in such case your verdict must be for the plaintiffs in such sum as you may believe from the evidence that they have been damaged and not to exceed the amount sued for.” All the evidence relating to the question of damage was confined to the crop of corn destroyed and there was no evidence of any damages suffered by plaintiffs in any other way and the instructions of defendant called the jury’s attention specifically to the fact that plaintiffs were claiming damages for the destruction of their-crop, and we do not think it possible that in this case the jury were misled upon that question.
Complaint is made by appellant in his brief that the court erred in refusing instructions number one and two asked on behalf of defendant. These were instructions in the nature of demurrers to the testimony. Number one was asked at the close of plaintiff’s testimony and number two at the close of all the testimony. The appellant bases his contention that these instructions should have been given upon the fact that defendant’s railroad was built before the law was enacted requiring railroads to ditch the right of way and that,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.