Athens Manufacturing Co. v. Rucker

Blandford, Justice.

Rucker, in 1873, brought his action on the case against the Athens Manufacturing Company, in which he alleged *293that this company had injured and damaged him $5,000; in that they had erected a certain dam across the Oconee river, and had afterwards increased the height of the dam a number of inches, and thereby caused the waters of Sandy creek and of the river to overflow his land, and furthermore caused. the height of the stream passing through his land to rise to a nearer level with the surface of the land, rendering his land moist and wet and injuring it for purposes of cultivation.

The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Rucker; whereupon the defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and the case was brought here upon the exceptions assigned in the motion for a new trial.

1. The first and second grounds of the motion are, that the verdict is contrary to law, and is without evidence to support it. The evidence consisted of the testimony introduced by the plaintiff in the court below, no evidence being introduced by the defendant. The plaintiff and his witnesses testified that, by reason of this dam, the water in the river and the creek which ran along and through the plaintiff’s lands, was raised and percolated through his land, which became wet and soggy, and that he was thereby injured and damaged. This testimony was not contradicted by the defendant in the court below. We think, therefore, that the first and second grounds of the motion are not well-taken, and that the verdict is not contrary to law and to the evidence, but is in accordance therewith.

2. The third ground of the motion is, that the court erred in refusing to charge the jury, as requested by defendant’s counsel, as follows: “In this case, the plaintiff claims damages on account of the overflow of his land by the back-water of defendant’s dam, which back-water, he says, covers his land, and also by causing the water to rise in the banks of the stream passing through plaintiff’s land, thus bringing the surface of said land nearer the water level, and wetting the land. These results, he says in his declaration, were- caused by the erection of defendant’s dam. *294In order to sustain, his alleged rights to recover in (his case, he must show that back-water from the dam comes in contact with the plaintiff’s land; unless, therefore, the back-water comes in contact with the plaintiff’s soil, the consequences are not within the scope of the present action, and you should find for the defendant.”

We understand the declaration differently from the plaintiff in error. Whilst it is true that pleadings are to be construed most strongly against the pleader, and that if two constructions can be put upon the pleadings, that which is more unfavorable to the pleader must obtain, yet there is another rule, that all pleadings must receive a construction in accordance with the natural intendment of the words and language of the pleadings. The declaration alleges that this dam caused the water in Sandy creek to rise to such an extent that it rendered the land of the plaintiff unfit for cultivation. We think this request is too broad, in view of the allegations in the declaration, and that the court would have committed manifest error if he had given it to the jury.

3. The 4th ground of error is, because the court erred in refusing to charge the jury, as requested by the defendant’s counsel, as follows:'“If you believe that the dam as it stood in July, 1873, and the back-water from it as it extended then, had remained unchanged for twenty years before the bringing of this suit, then the plaintiff cannot recover.”

While it may have been .true that the dam had remained unchanged for twenty years, yet if, during that twenty years, it had caused the filling up of the stream and the plaintiff's land with sand, increasing the height of the water and injuring and damaging the plaintiff, we cannot see why he should not recover. This was an invasion upon his land; and he had the right to recover for any injury that occurred to him within four years preceding the bringing of his action, according to our statute. This request to charge was inapplicable, because the declaration *295and the proof showed that the damage occurred, in consequence of the raising of the dam, within four years of the time the plaintiff brought his action. The proof showed that no injury had accrued to this land from the raising of the water prior to this increase of the height of the dam, but that it occurred afterwards. The request was inapplicable, and the court did right to refuse it.

4. The next ground is the 5th, which is as follows : Because the court erred in refusing to charge the jury, as requested by defendant’s counsel, as follows: “ When the consequences of a present or antecedent negligence are impending, whoever can shun them by ordinary care and fails to do so, ought not perhaps to be heard to complain of them, whether they touch his person or his property. If, therefore, by exercise of ordinary care, the plaintiff in this case could have avoided the consequences of the defendant’s negligence, if there is such negligence, and has failed to exercise such care, he cannot recover. Even if you believe that the dam has been instrumental in some way in wetting his land, still if he, by using ordinary care in taking care of his land, could have warded off the injurious consequences, and has failed to use such care, then he cannot recover.”

We do not think that this is a case of negligence. If this company raised their dam, thereby causing water in the creek to run over the plaintiff’s land, and thereby injuring and damaging him, that was an invasion of his rights, and was a positive act on the part of the defendant, and not a case of negligence; nor was it negligence on the part of the plaintiff not to do anything to avoid the consequences of their act. Every man has the right to enjoy his property to the fullest extent, and whenever that right is invaded by another and injury accrues to him, he is entitled to his damages therefor. The evidence fails to show that the plaintiff did anything that led to or increased this damage. He did nothing, and he had a right to do nothing ; and if they invaded his rights, they were liable to him *296for'any damages which he sustained by reason of such invasion. We think the court would have been guilty of manifest error to have given this request in charge to the jury. It was not applicable to the facts in evidence, though it may have been sound law on a different state of facts.

5. There are other exceptions, to the effect that the jury found contrary to certain charges of the court. That is equivalent to saying that the jury found contrary to law; which we do not think they did. I have said frequently, and say it again, that it is wholly unnecessary for counsel to put such grounds in the motion for new trial as that the jury found contrary to certain charges of the court. That is included in the general ground that the verdict is contrary to law, and it is unnecessary to repeat the ground specifically in this way.

6. The last ground of the motion is, that the court erred in admitting the testimony of Gray, Parks and Covington, over the objection of defendant’s counsel, going to show that the sand was backed up in the mouth of Sandy creek, and gradually accumulating back in the channel of the creek as it flows through land formerly belonging to Gray, or that crops were thereby injured. The use plaintiff intended to make and did make of this testimony was, to argue that other sand lodged against this sand and finally accumulated back up the channel of the creek in. plaintiff’s land, and raised the water in the banks of the creek as it flows through plaintiff’s land. Defendant’s counsel objected to this testimony as irrelevant to this issue.” We think this testimony was admissible.

Judgment affirmed.