Prior to 1882, the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company constructed a culvert over a small stream, the effect of which, it was alleged, was to obstruct the free passage of water that formerly flowed through the channel of the stream. Berry rented for two years from a third person some bottom land that lay just above this culvert. He cultivated the land, or attempted it, both years (1882 and 1883). A few acres lying near the culvert proved to be of no productive value. His crops were drowned out by back-water from the culvert, as he contends. He brought his action against the railroad company for these damages, alleging that the land was of the yearly value of $15 per acre, over' and above the expense of cultivation, for which purpose it was used at the time; He alleged , that this culvert interfered with and stopped the free flow of the water, thereby causing the same to back up and stand on the land, saturating the soil with water, so that the land became of no practical use or benefit to the plaintiff.
The case was tried, and much evidence introduced, some of it going to show that a few acres of this bottom was seriously damaged by the obstruction; and much of it, on the contrary, going to show that there was no damage of any consequence from that source, but that a part at least of the trouble resulted from the failure of the plaintiff to keep a ditch in the bottom cleaned out. Some of the evidence tended to establish the fact that there was a marsh there all the time, and that the attempt was made by the plaintiff to cultivate this marsh, which had never-been previously cultivated. The effect of the whole upon the mind of the reader is, that there was conflict throughout. Some of the evidence seems to indicate that the difficulty was caused by the back-water from Fishing creek, a creek into which this stream flowed a few yards *747below the embankment. Some of the witnesses thought there was no back-water from Fishing creek, but that the back-water was caused altogether by the embankment and the culvert. It was properly and pre-eminently a question for the jury as to what really caused the damage and the extent of it. We find ourselves unable to settle it any better than they did, if as well. The plain tiff recovered, upon the second-trial, a verdict for $60. A motion was made for a new trial, and it was overruled. . The complaint was partly of the admission of evidence and partly of the refusal to charge the jury as requested.,
1. The declaration does not allege simply that the property was of the yearly value of $15 per acre, but that'it was of the yearly value of $15 per. acre for cultivation. The plaintiff had rented the [land and wanted it for use. It would hardly do to say he could recover no more than its value for rent. The presumption is that he paid that much, and his real interest in it was the difference between the value for rent and the production," deducting the cost of production; that would be the measure of his beneficial interest in it; andit seems that capacity for production and expense of production would tend to illustrate its yearly value to him, and we can see no reason for restricting him to what he could have gotten by renting it out. He did not want to rent it out; he wanted to cultivate it, and was entitled to do it; and if its productiveness was impaired by this wrongful obstacle to the free flow of the water, it seems that he was entitled to recover accordingly. The yearly value of land being in question, the crop which it would produce, if free from' the alleged nuisance, is a relevant fact when coupled with the cost of production. Yearly value is not measured alone by value for rent, but may be . measured as well by value for cultivation.
2. That an attempt was made to raise a crop on the damaged land, and that the crop was ^drowned out by the nuisance, is admissible as tending to show that the' yearly value of the land was affected by the nuisance, the declar*748ation alleging that water was caused to back over and stand upon the land.
3. The court was requested to charge the jury, that if the plaintiff contributed to the damage, he could not recover. If he had a ditch filled up that he ought to have kept open, or let it fill up, and thus made his damage more, it would not prevent him from recovering so much damage as he sustained from the culvert, without reference to the ditch; and there is evidence going to show that the culvert damaged the land independently of the ditch. If it did, to the extent of that damage the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, notwithstanding he may have caused more damage by his own act. The request to charge, adapting it to the evidence in the case, should have been that be could not recover for any damage that resulted from his own act, but could recover for any damage that resulted from the defendant’s act independently of his own. The charge refused, we think, was properly refused, for the reason I have indicated. That the plaintiff contributes to his damage by making it more than it would otherwise be, will not prevent a recovery for so much as it is without such increase by his own act.
4. There were two more requests to charge: one to the effect that where a railroad had a grant of a right of way, and constructed its road properly, it would not be liable for any damage resulting from construction; the other to the effect that the assessment of damages, in compensating for the right of way, would be presumed to include all future damage, known or unknown, provided the work was done properly. There was no evidence that there had been any grant of the right of way, or that any damages therefor had ever been assessed; so if these propositions are right in themselves, they rest on something outside of the evidence; and therefore we need not consider them further. Where there is no evidence of any grant of the right of way or the assessment of compensation therefor, it is not error to decline to charge the jury touching these matters. *749The best we can do with the case, while it is not quite satisfactory, is to affirm the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.