Sutliff v. Johnson
Sutliff v. Johnson
Opinion of the Court
In 1879 the defendants in error purchased the mill and appurtenances on the Blue river at Milford. At the time-the defendants in error purchased the property the dam across the river was raised to eight or eight and one-half feet above the natural flow of the stream. In the fall of 1880 the defendants in error raised the dam to fourteen feet, and in the year 1882 instituted proceedings in ad quod damnum for the condemnation of the property overflowed or injured by the backwater. The plaintiff in error at that time was the owner of the S. E. -J, the E. J of the N. W. i and the W. J of the N. E. -f of section 26, 7,10, R. 3 east, which was overflowed or affected by the raising of the dam. The plaintiff in error, therefore, was made a defendant in the condemnation proceedings. A jury was impaneled, examined the property damaged, and made a report in conformity to the statute. The defendants below filed answers, and on the trial of the cause in the district court the-jury returned a verdict for $30 in favor of the-plaintiff in error for the damages sustained by him. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was rendered on the verdict.
The only question raised by the pleadings is the amount of damages to which the plaintiff in error is entitled. The testimony tends to show that the water in the river on the plaintiff’s land is raised from four to six feet; that in consequence thereof some of the low ground along the river is flooded by the backwater and is of no value; that a considerable quantity of timber was growing along and near the banks of the stream on the plaintiff’s land and that a, portion of this has been killed and destroyed; that about
The attorneys for Sutliff asked the court to give-the following instruction, which was refused:
“The jury are instructed that under the issues made in this case they should consider all past damages sustained by defendant Sutliff' to said lands caused by raising said dam beyond eight feet in height, during the ten years immediately before the beginning of this action, if any such past damages to said land have been sustained by him, and you should include the same in your verdict in addition to the difference of market value of the land immediately after the raising the height of said dam, unless you further find from the evidence that said plaintiffs, F. S. Johnson & Co., or their predecessors, by proceedings under the statute, or from the owner of said lands, had obtained the right to so raise the same beyond the height of eight feet.” The instruction asked it will be observed directed the jury to give such damages as were caused by raising the dam above eight feet at any time within ten years before bringing the action, and also the difference in “the market value of the land immediately before and immediately after the raising of the height of said dam.” In this form it was calculated to mislead the jury, and therefore was properly refused. The court, however, had given an instruction “that these plaintiffs would not be liable for damages occasioned to defendant’s land by backwater from said dam at any time prior to the time they became the owners of said mill, nor for .any damages except such as directly follow from acts of the plaintiffs or their agents or employes.” This is not
In Ray v. A. & N. R. R. Co., 4 Neb., 439, a corporation called the Burlington and South Western R. R. Co. located its line over the plaintiff’s land, and the award of damages being made, appealed to the district court, where judgment was rendered against the company, but it failed to pay to the county judge the amount of the award or to pay the judgment. The company then assigned all its rights, interests, and franchises to the A. & N. R. R. Co., and it was held that it acquired no greater rights than were possessed by its assignor, and that it would not be permitted to operate the road across the plaintiff’s land unless it paid the judgment. The same principle applies in this case. The instruction, therefore, is erroneous. It is evident, too, that the attempt to distinguish the damages occasioned by successively raising the dam tended to confuse the jury and was prejudicial to the plaintiff. The court refused to give the following instruction: “ If you find that any part of the land in question has been overflowed by reason of said mill-dam and by reason of said overflow has been rendered useless and of no value to this defendant, H. S. Sutliff, you are instructed that so much of the land so overflowed is regarded in law as appropriated by the plaintiffs, F. S.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Harvey S. Sutliff, in error v. Fred S. Johnson, in error
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published