Conwell v. Emrie

Davison, J.

Trespass on the case by Conwett against Emrie. Plea, not guilty. The cause was submitted to a jury. Verdict for the defendant. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.

The following are the facts proved on the trial:

The plaintiff, in June, 1840, was, and still is, the owner in fee of a certain close or tract of land in Dearborn county, situate at the foot of, and on the north side of a certain public road, on which close he had a tan-yard. The defendant, as supervisor of the road district, &c., constructed a culvert across the road in such a manner as to convey the water from the hill-side into and upon the tan-yard, whereby the same was seriously injured. The road was so situated that a culvert across the same was, at that time, necessary; but it might have been made a few yards further east, so as to answer the purpose for which the one in question was constructed, without serious injury to any one; but it would have cost from 15 to 50 dollars more than the one constructed. At the time the culvert was built, the farm, on the tract of land, was in *210the possession of one Groves, as tenant under the plaintiff; but the tan-yard was then in the possession and use of the plaintiff. Groves was authorized by the plaintiff to see that his property in that neighborhood was not injured; and at the time the culvert was built, he remonstrated against its construction; and immediately thereafter, the defendant offered to cut or dig a ditch from the mouth of the culvert through the lands of the plaintiff, so as to convey the drainage of the hill-side passing through the culvert between the tan-yard- and the dwelling-house, on the same land occupied by Groves; but Groves would not allow the same to be done. The ordinary taxes for keeping the roads in repair, were for that year inadequate for the purpose. The defendant, before he built the culvert, took the advice of divers hands working on the road with him, with respect to the place where it should be constructed, and they, in good faith, advised its construction at the place where it was made.

The Court gave various instructions to the jury, and among them the following: “ That if the defendant offered to dig a ditch by which the water, &c., would have been conveyed off said tan-yard lot, and the damage which the plaintiff has sustained would have been thereby averted, and the plaintiff or his agent forbade the defendant to do so, he cannot recover for the damage which would not have accrued, if said ditch had been made.”

The giving of this.instruction, and the refusal to grant a new trial, are the errors assigned.

The duty of a supervisor is prescribed by statute. He is required to keep in order the' highways in his district; and for that purpose he may enter upon any lands adjoining or near to any highway in his district, and thereupon construct such ditches, &c., as may be necessary for the construction, repair, &c., of such highway. R. S. 1843, c. 16, s. 86, 87.

The power here given to a supervisor should be executed in good faith, and in a proper discharge of his duty to the public. When he acts without the scope of his *211authority, and private injury is thereby sustained, the law will not protect him.

J. Hyman, for the plaintiff.

Taking this view of the case, the instruction given was not correct. The defendant could not avoid the consequences of the trespass with which he was charged, in the mode assumed by the Court. He was bound to show that the culvert was necessary for the construction, repair, or preservation of the highway, and that it was constructed at a proper place.

We think the instruction was erroneous; but still we do not consider that error sufficient cause for reversing this judgment. The record professes to contain all the evidence given on the trial. We are satisfied that it was not sufficient to have supported a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. In one respect the proof was materially defective. It was not shown that the plaintiff incurred, any amount of damage from the construction of the culvert. Nor does the evidence furnish any data upon which the jury could have estimated damages in his favor. 1 Saund. Pl. and Ev. 352. The motion for a new trial was, therefore, correctly overruled.

Per Curiam.

The judgment is affirmed with costs.