Appellant brought this suit to recover damages. His petition charged that the damages were caused by the unskillful construction of defendant’s railroad by reason of which the surface water, which had previously flowed away from his land, was thrown back upon it, overflowing about 35 acres of cultivated laud and about 15 acres of pasture land at several different dates during the years 1887, 1888, and-1889, for several days continuously in each instance; that such overflows will continue so long as the railroad is left in its present condition, and have diminished the value of the land as much as one half, or $12.50 per acre; that by reason of overflows in the .spring of the years 1888 and 1889, causing delay in planting, plaintiff’s crops were damaged $200 each year; and that the effects of the overflows in the summer and fall of said years were to damage plaintiff’s cotton crop in each of said years $250; and that said overflows damaged the grass growing on said land each of the years 1888 and 1889, $50.
The plaintiff introduced evidence showing the occurrence and continuance of the overflows substantially as alleged, and also that they were caused by the construction of defendant’s road. The evidence with regard to injury caused to the land did not show any change of condition in the surface of the soil or any permanent injury to the land itself, except the conclusion of the witness that the land had been permanently damaged from tc$4 to $5 per acre.” The evidence of the plaintiff tended to show damage to grass and crops of cotton and corn produced by recurring overflows.
. The court charged the jury that there was no evidence before them that would entitle the plaintiff to recover for any permanent injury to his land or depreciation of its value.
The appellant contends that the charge was erroneous, because all of the facts were in evidence before the jury, and it was for them and not the court to determine whether or not the injury was permanent.
The proper rule in such cases was stated by this court in the case of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company v. Helsley, 62 Texas, *607596. It is there said: “If the appellee's crops have been destroyed or damaged by the negligence or wrong of the appellant in the matters complained of, then he is entitled to recover their value, and if his land has been rendered less productive or otherwise injured, then he is entitled to recover such damage as will be a fair compensation to him for the loss thus sustained; and from time to time if injury results to him from the negligence or wrong continuing he will be entitled to relief by a proper action' or actions.”
If there had been any evidence of a permanent injury to the land itself, then the question whether or not the evidence sustained the plaintiff should have been submitted to the jury; but if there was no evidence that a permanent injury to the soil had been produced it was the duty of the court to say so to the jury. On the case made by the record we think the charge was correct.
It is contended that “The court erred in giving the charge, cIf you should find for the plaintiff, the measure of damages, if any, is the actual injury which the evidence may show his crops have actually sustained on the land at the times overflows may have been shown to have occurred, and by reason of the construction of defendant's -road,' for the reason that thereby the jury were excluded from the consideration of any damages which plaintiff sustained by reason of said overflows having injured his grass, and also any damage he sustained by reason of not being able to plant.his crops in proper season, their finding for plaintiff, if any, being limited to the actual injury to the crops on the land at the time of such overflow.”
We fail to see why-the jury need have been misled into the belief that the charge precluded the recovery of damages to crops caused by overflows that delayed their being planted. If the plaintiff entertained a doubt upon the subject, it would have been proper for him to have called the attention of the court to the omission by requesting a charge.
We do not feel so sure, however, that the omission in the charge to mention the damage to the pasture or grass was not such an error as should lead to a reversal of the cause. There was evidence to support the issue. While grass may in a general sense be considered a crop, we do not think, when the pleadings, evidence, and the charge are considered as a whole, that the jury were likely to have understood it as included in the charge given as one element of plaintiff’s case. As quoted in the above paragraph and at the close of the charge, the error we think amounts to something more than a mere omission to state an additional issue which it would have been the duty of the plaintiff to have pointed out by requesting an additional instruction.
Over the objections of plaintiff the defendant was permitted to prove that the “Tilman Banes” place, which was situated near plaintiff's land, was during the years 1888 and 1889 too wet to cultivate properly one *608year or at all the other year. In the bill of exceptions taken by plaintiff to the admission of the evidence the court states that it was allowed because “the tract of land to which the testimony relates was claimed to be contiguous to the land in controversy and of the same elevation.”
Delivered February 17, 1891.Before such a test can be properly applied the condition of the two places with regard to the production of a crop should be proved in every material particular. Such evidence can scarcely ever be of a very satisfactory character.
The evidence does show that the two places are contiguous to each other, and with regard to their respective “elevations” a witness testified as follows: “The water that went south through plaintiff’s land before the railroad was built overflowed from the lake when there was more than could go through the eastern outlet and hacked up through the low place on plaintiff’s land across which the road is built, and this low place continues on southward through the ‘Tilman Fanes’ place and the Tate place, on which it emptied the excessive water into Hill’s Branch.”
We do not think that there was sufficient evidence of similar conditions affecting the two places to justify the admission of the evidence.
Another witness was permitted, over plaintiff’s objection, to testify as follows: “Several years ago I bought the tract of land now owned by plaintiff. At that time I contended that the portion of the same where the railroad now runs was low, wet land, and was only fit for pasture pur-’ poses.” We think the objection should have been sustained.
And generally upon this branch of the case, while the witnesses may be permitted to testify to facts relating to the condition of the land, we do not think that their motives nor their negotiations relating to previous purchases or sales of it should be admitted when objected to.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.