1. The petition as amended set out a cause of action, and the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer thereto.
2. “ When it appears from a bill of exceptions that a motion for a new trial was amended, and the amendment to the motion is specified in the bill of exceptions as one of the papers material to a proper consideration of the errors assigned, it is too late, after the certification of the bill of exceptions, to raise the objection that the grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial were not formally approved by the trial judge. Acts 1811, p. 150, sec. 3.” Carraway v. State, 16 Ga. App. 161 (1) (84 S. E. 615). See also Chicago & Northwestern Ry. v. Elliott, 16 Ga. App. 388 (1)(85 S. E. 615); Farmers Mutual Fire Association v. Steed, 20 Ga. App. 329, 330 (93 S. E. 75).
3. In the trial of a suit for a continuing nuisance consisting of damage to crops and land by reason of the overflow and backing up of waters, alleged to have been caused by an embankment of a railroad company, it being contended by the plaintiff that the company, after the building of the embankment and drain or trestle thereunder, permitted and caused cross-ties, trash, and rubbish to be thrown into tlie creek running under the embankment, thereby damming up the flow of the water and causing the same to back up and overflow the lands of the plaintiff, any negligence on the part of the company in the construction of the roadway or embankment, or any acts of negligence on the part of the company more than four years prior to the bringing of the suit, would be barred by the statute of limitations, and the plaintiff, if he recovered at all, would be entitled to recover only damages caused by the negli.gence of the company within the period of four years prior to the bringing of the suit. It was therefore error for the court, upon the trial of the case, to charge the jury in the following language: “I charge you, as a matter of law, the plaintiff, the owner of this property,' is entitled to have the water flow from his property in its natural way, *153and if the defendant railroad company, in constructing their railroad or in keeping and maintaining their railroad, did within the four-year period obstruct this flow, of the water in either of the ways charged by the plaintiff in his petition, to such an extent that it overflowed and damaged his land in the way he has alleged, then in that event he would be entitled to recover just such damages as you think from the evidence has accrued to him by reason of the defendant’s negligence.” This charge, connecting up the construction with the other acts of negligence alleged to have been committed within four years prior to the bringing of the suit, tended to cause the jury to take into consideration any defective construction of the drain or trestle as a part of the negligence of the defendant company for which a recovery could be had.
Decided April 8, 1920.*153 Judgment reversed.
Jenkins, P. J., and Stephens; J., concur. Shattuck & Shattuck, for plaintiff in error. Henry & Jackson, D. F. Pope, contra.