Pierce v. Marion County Lumber Co.
Pierce v. Marion County Lumber Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for damages against the defendant on account of alleged damages'to growing crops, caused by damming and obstructing of a running stream by the defendant, which stream was alleged to be the natural drain of defendant’s land. The complaint charged the defendant with negligence, carelessness, wilfulness and wantonness in filling up and draining the stream. The answer of defendant was a general denial. The case was tried before his Honor, Judge Prince, and a jury, at the March term of Court, 1917, for Dillon county, and resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $500, actual damages, and $100, punitive damages. After entry of judgment defendant appealed.
There are two exceptions. The first relates to a statement made by his Honor in the presence of the jury to one of defendant’s counsel during the progress of the trial.
The issues in the case were whether or not the defendant had wilfully or negligently obstructed the stream; the defendant complains that the remark of his Honor, while Mr. J. W. Brunson was being examined, to Mr. Woods, defendant’s attorney, was not a charge on the facts in contravention of the Constitution, as the remark was not made in his charge to the jury, but the remark was an expression of opinion by his Honor in the presence of the jury upon the only issue in the case, and highly prejudicial to the rights of the defendant, and which did of necessity prejudice its rights and made his Honor a participant in the decision of facts upon which the issue depended and was before the jury for their determination. The Court is asked to reverse the *389 verdict on the ground that the Judge’s remarks influenced the jury.
It is in evidence that the jury went and saw the locus; that they were residents of that county, and must have been of ordinary intelligence and familiar in a measure with the running streams of their county and were capable of judging what would and what would not obstruct a stream and prevent its running and dam it up. A careful analysis of the Judge’s charge as a whole will not bear out appellant’s construction that he was a participant with the jury in deciding the facts involved or that he influenced them in arriving at their finding.
The Judge did not by his remark violate the law of propriety. From the entire case it cannot be said that it can be made to appear that the remark was even probably prejudicial, much less clearly prejudicial, to the defendant, and these exceptions are overruled.
The second exception alleges error in charging the jury as to punitive damages in violation of the criminal law of the land. His Honor, in his charge, did not read or refer at all to any criminal law.
*390
Exceptions overruled. Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Appeal and Error — Harmless Error. — Error, if any, in excluding testimony is not prejudicial, where another witness testified fully to the same fact. 2. Trial — Instructions—Statements oe Judge. — Where the Judge left all the facts to the jury for their determination, a remark that certain facts were within the knowledge of people of ordinary intel- » ligence, and that the witness must state facts and permit the jury to draw their inferences, was not erroneous. 3. Statutes — Special Laws — Drainage—Validity.—Cr. Code 1912, sec. 237, requiring landowners to clean out streams, and section 238, making it a misdemeanor to obstruct a stream, are constitutional in view of act Feb. 18, 1905 (24 St. at Large, p. 830), authorizing the'. General Assembly to pass local or special laws concerning drainage.