Zollman v. Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad

Caldwell, J.

Appellant is the owner of a 284-acre farm situate immediately east of the town of Medora, in Jackson county, through which, on an embankment, appellee’s railroad extends in a general direction of southwest and northeast, and so that the major portion of the farm is south of the railroad. South of the railroad and roughly paralleling it-flows White river in a southwesterly direction. At the time of the flood of 1913 appellee’s embankment broke, and as a consequence large quantities of water impounded on the north side thereof were suddenly discharged upon appellant’s lands south of the railroad. As a result his lands were damaged, and certain personal property injured and destroyed. Averring that appellee had negligently and unlawfully obstructed the flood waters of White river to .his injury as alleged, he brought this action to recover the consequent damages. A trial resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee, on which judgment was rendered.

1. 2. Before considering the cause on its merits, there are certain preliminary questions that must be determined. Thus, no exception was reserved to the judgment. -The verdict was in general terms in favor of appellee. On the verdict judgment was rendered that appellant take nothing, and that appellee recover costs. Such judgment follows such a verdict as matter of course. Strictly speaking it involves no ruling, and consequently requires no exception in order that the losing party may be protected in his rights. Where the judgment is proper in form and in substance, as measured by the verdict or finding, the question of its correctness, as measured by the cause and the procedure, is tested by exceptions reserved to rulings pre*400ceding the rendering of judgment and properly presented. Elliott, App. Proc. §796; Eckhart v. Marion, etc., Traction Co. (1915), 59 Ind. App. 217, 109 N. E. 224; State v. Swarts (1857), 9 Ind. 221; Duzan, Admx., v. Myers (1903), 30 Ind. App. 227, 65 N. E. 1046, 96 Am. St. 341; Smith v. Tate (1903), 30 Ind. App. 367, 66 N. E. 88.

The validity of §661 Burns 1914, Acts 1911 p. 193, is challenged. That question has in effect been determined. Appellee concedes as much in its.brief. Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Smith (1912), 177 Ind. 524, 97 N. E. 164; Tarnowski v. Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. (1914), 181 Ind. 202, 104 N. E. 16.

Under that section appellant obtained an extension of time within which to file his bill of exceptions containing the evidence, beyond the time limited by the court for that purpose when the appeal was prayed and granted. It is urged that such extension was unauthorized by reason of defective notice to appellee, and that as a consequence the bill was not filed within the time properly fixed for that purpose, and that as a result it is not a part of the record. The facts are as follows: The motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered November 9, 1914, at the October term of the trial court, and ninety days given within which to file the bill of’ exceptions containing the evidence. February 2, 1915, at a succeeding term of the court, appellant, proceeding under §661, supra, applied for and was granted an extension of such time to April 1, 1915. That section contains a provision to the effect that the party asking such an extension of time shall give the opposite party, or his attorney of record, at least three days ’ notice of the time when, and the place where, the application will be heard. *401Filed -with the verified application there was a copy of notice sufficient in form and substance and directed to appellee’s attorneys of record, and attached to which there was an affidavit to .the effect that six days prior to February 2,1915, the day fixed for presenting the application, one of appellant’s attorneys inclosed the original of such notice in an envelope properly stamped and addressed to appellee’s said attorneys at Aurora, Indiana, and deposited it so stamped and addressed in the United States, mail. Appellee presents the question of the sufficiency of a notice under such statute where there is no service of it otherwise than as indicated. For reasons hereinafter appearing we do not find it necessary to determine such question, but by reason of its importance we suggest the insufficiency of a notice so served, where the service is not accepted as such. See the following: §§504, 505 Burns 1914, §§481, 482 R. S. 1881; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Sanders (1917), 63 Ind. App. 586, 114 N. E. 986; Haj v. American Bottle Co. (1914), 261 Ill. 362, 103 N. E. 1000; Scanlon v. Scanlon (1912), 154 Iowa 748, 135 N. W. 634; North Coast Fire Ins. Co. v. Lincoln County (1914), 81 Wash. 311, 142 Pac. 661; Matter of Blumberg (1912), 149 App. Div. 303, 133 N. Y. Supp. 774; Ensley v. State (1910), 4 Okla. Cr. 49, 109 Pac. 250; Rathbun v. Acher (1854), 18 Barb. (N. Y.) 393; Wilson v. Trenton (1891), 53 N. J. Law 645, 23 Atl. 278, 16 L. R. A. 200; 29 Cyc 1117, 1119.

3-4. As we have said, we are not required to determine the sufficiency of the notice or its service here. The bill itself discloses that it was presented to the judge on February 5, 1915, within the time originally granted. This is sufficient, although *402the bill was not filed until March 17. §660 Burns 1914, §629 R. S. 1881; Malott v. Central Trust Co. (1907), 168 Ind. 428, 79 N. E. 369, 11 Ann. Cas. 879.

5. There is a vacation entry to the effect that the bill was presented to the judge on March 5, instead of February 5, but the bill controls in this respect. Malott v. Central Trust Co., supra. It maybe-said also that there are some indications outside the bill that the date of presentation stated in the bill is, erroneous. If so, no steps have been taken to ■ correct the bill, and it must therefore govern as to the date of presentation. It results that, as recourse was not had to the extended time, irregularities orinsufficiencies attending the procedure to procure the extension are immaterial.

6. We proceed to consider the various arguments advanced by appellee in support of its contention that the instructions are not in the record. The instructions were brought into the record by a bill of exceptions. An inspection of the bill discloses that it is proper in form and substance, and that it contains all the instructions that were given and all. that were tendered and refused, and that appellant reserved an exception to each instruction given by the court on its own motion and at appellee’s request, and a like exception to the refusal of each instruction tendered by appellant and not given. It appears from an order-book entry that the bill was filed on the day that the trial closed and consequently within the term at which the trial was had. The filing of the bill was a sufficient filing of the instructions. Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Dunn (1894), 138 Ind. 18, 36 N. E. 702, 37 N. E. 546.

*4037. *402It appears also that the bill was signed on the day *403that it was filed, it not appearing expressly whether the signing preceded the filing. It is true that it is essential to the validity of a bill of exceptions that it be filed after rather than before it has been signed. But where, as is the case here, it appears that there was no default respecting the time of filing the bill and that it was filed on the day it was signed, the latter act is presumed to have preceded the former. Giving force to such presumption, it is sufficiently disclosed that the bill was signed before it was filed. Martin v. State (1897), 148 Ind. 519, 47 N. E. 930; Toledo, etc., R. Co. v. Parks (1904), 163 Ind. 592, 72 N. E. 636; Davis v. Neighbors (1905), 34 Ind. App. 441, 73 N. E. 151.

8. The various other statutory methods of’ making instructions a part of the record in a civil action are not exclusive of the method by bill of excep-

tions. Berry v. Driver (1906), 167 Ind. 127, 76 N. E. 967; Republic Iron, etc., Co. v. Lulu (1911), 48 Ind. App. 271, 92 N. E. 993.

9. The instructions being properly in the record by bill of exceptions, it is not necessary that we determine whether that end was accomplished' by other methods also attempted, or whether the statute was complied with in that respect.

10. Appellee insists that questions raised under the motion for a new trial should not be considered for the reason that the motion is not set out in full -in appellant’s brief. The substance of those grounds on which appellant relies is set out. This is sufficient. There is no substantial reason why an appellant should encumber his brief with causes for a new trial waived or not relied on in this court.

*40411. *403Certain other criticisms are made respecting the *404form and substance of appellant’s briefs. The briefs are sufficient to present a number of questions on the merits of the case. Those questions are therefore entitled to consideration. North v. Jones (1913), 53 Ind. App. 203, 100 N. E. 84. It may be said, however, that appellee’s briefs, except certain general and unapplied propositions, are devoted exclusively to objections to the sufficiency of the transcript and to criticism of appellant’s briefs. Appellee’s briefs under points and authorities do not contain a single specific proposition directed to any alleged error urged upon our attention by appellant.

An understanding of the general nature of the complaint is essential to a proper consideration of questions presented involving the merits of the cause. The complaint is in two paragraphs. The first paragraph is briefly to the following effect: The general direction of White river through Jackson county is southwest. It flows near the center of a low flat plain about three miles wide flanked by hills on either side. This plain is the flood or high water channel of the river. Appellant’s 284-acre farm lies in this plain, its' south line being about a quarter of a mile north of the river. The river overflows its ordinary channel one or more times each year, and in each generation there occur from five to ten floods that cover the entire plain. Appellee’s railroad extends through the county near the river, and in the same general direction. The railroad passes through appellant’s farm, and so that about thirty-five acres of the latter in its northwest corner are north of the former. About three miles east of the farm, at a point where the course of the river is south, the railroad crosses its ordinary channel at right angles, on a bridge. East *405of this point the railroad is south of the river; to the west it is north of the river. The railroad crosses the plain diagonally, emerging from the southern hills a number of miles east of the farm and east of where it crosses the river, and passing into the north line of bordering hills several miles west of the farm. The railroad crosses the flood plain on an artificial embankment ranging from three to fifteen feet high with trestle work at intervals. Except for such trestle work, the bridge and an occasional culvert, the embankment extends southwesterly in an unbroken line from bordering hills to bordering hills. From time to time and after floods and between successive floods appellee has built the embankment higher and reduced the trestle work in number and in length. Likewise the bridge by which the railroad crosses the river has been rebuilt several times, additional piers having been erected for that purpose in the low-water channel. In rebuilding the bridge, old piers no longer in use, and surrounded by grouting covering several hundred square feet of the ordinary bed of the river, were left standing. Formerly there was open trestle work in the embankment east of the river, but prior to the grievances complained of such trestle work had been removed and the embankment built solid from the east end of the bridge to the hills.

The following acts of omission are charged and characterized as negligence: That the supporting-timbers and piling of the trestle work were bound together in clusters, and placed so as to obstruct unnecessarily the passage of the water, and so as to cause a collection of drift and debris which further prevented the passage of water; that an unnecessary number of piers were built under the bridge, and said *406old piers were permitted to remain, whereby the free flowage of water was prevented, large quantities of drift permitted to accumulate, and a large sand bar caused to form, by reason of which the low-water channel was greatly obstructed; that the embankment was constructed and maintained with insufficient trestle work and openings; that the embankment was raised from time to time as above stated, and adequate openings for the passage of water were.not constructed or left, and thereby the capacity of the embankment to pond water on the upper side was increased, and that the embankment was constructed and maintained of light material easily washed away. All these acts and omissions are characterized as having been negligently done and omitted.

There are allegations also grounded on clause 5, §5195 Burns 1914, §3903 B. S. 1881, which empowers a railroad company to construct its road across any stream or watercourse in such manner as to afford security for life and property, but which requires that any such company shall restore the stream or watercourse so crossed to its former state, or in sufficient manner as not to unnecessarily impair its usefulness or injure its franchises.

It is further alleged that in March, 1913, by reason of heavy and continued rains, White river was floo'ded, and that its waters overflowed its ordinary channel and spread out over the plain that constituted the bed of its high-water channel; that by reason of said embankment with its insufficient and obstructed openings, the water could not, and did not, flow away, but became impounded on the upper side of the embankment at an elevation of several feet above the - level of the waters on the lower side; that by reason *407of the pressure of the .impounded waters, and the material of which the embankment was constructed, the latter broke in several places, some of which were on the railroad right of way on appellant’s farm, and that as a result torrents of water swept down onto and over appellant’s farm, wearing away the soil, washing great holes in it, and depositing great quantities of drift and debris, to the permanent damage of the land, and that as a further consequence certain of appellant’s stock were drowned and others injured. There is a general averment of damages in the sum of $15,000, for which judgment is asked.

The allegations of the second paragraph are, in the main, similar to those of the first paragraph. The theory of the first paragraph is that the flood waters of White river were a part of the stream, and that such waters, aided by appellee’s negligence, caused the damage complained of. The second paragraph proceeds on the theory that the waters that spread over the plain were surface waters which appellee negligently impounded on its right of way, and which it permitted to be suddenly discharged therefrom, to appellant’s damage.

There was evidence supporting the averments of fact contained in the complaint in their general scope. Indicating nothing respecting the weight of such evidence, we proceed to the substantial questions presented involving the merits of the cause.

12. Appellant challenges certain instructions given by the court, among them the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-ninth. The twentieth instruction was as follows: “If you find that the injury and damage complained of in plaintiff’s complaint was caused by a flood which was unusual, extraordi*408nary and unexpected, the plaintiff cannot recover.” The physical condition to which such instruction must he applied in order that its correctness may be measured, as determined from a consideration of the allegations of the complaint and the evidence adduced in support thereof, is as follows: White river is a stream of water. It has a low-water channel which is •a natural watercourse. It has also a flood channel which is a natural high-water course. The river frequently overflows its low-water channel and floods the high-water channel. At such times the waters in the low-water channel and the waters heaped above them and the waters that overspread the high-water channel, when unobstructed by the act of man, flow down stream in one uniform and continuous current. Regardless of what may seem to be the view as indicated by some of the earlier decisions, it is now apparently the settled law of this state that all such waters are the waters of a natural watercourse, and that liability for obstructing the flow thereof must be determined from a consideration of those principles of law that govern in case of the obstruction of a stream rather than in case of mere surface water. See the following, which cite many other cases: Watts v. Evansville, etc., R. Co. (1918), (Ind. App.) 120 N. E. 611; Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v.. Woodbury Glass Co. (1918), (Ind. App.) 120 N. E. 426; Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Scott (1916), 67 Ind. App. 121, 114 N. E. 649; Vandalia R. Co. v. Yeager (1915), 60 Ind. App. 118, 110 N. E. 230; New York, etc., R. Co. v. Hamlet Hay Co. (1898), 149 Ind. 344, 47 N. E. 1060, 49 N. E. 269; Northern Ind. Land Co. v. Brown (1914), 182 Ind. 438, 106 N. E. 706; Bristol Hydraulic Co. v. Boyer (1879), 67 Ind. 236; Dunn v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. *409(1917), 63 Ind. App. 553, 114 N. E. 888. See, also, Fordham v. Northern Pacific R. Co. (1904), 30 Mont. 421, 76 Pac. 1040, 66 L. R. A. 556, 104 Am. St. 729; Cairo, etc., R. Co. v. Brevoort (1894), 62 Fed. 129, 25 L. R. A. 527; O’Connell v. East Tenn. R. Co. (1891), 87 Ga. 246, 13 S. E. 489, 13 L. R. A. 394, 27 Am. St. 246; Crawford v. Rambo (1886), 44 Ohio St. 279, 7 N. E. 429.

Eeturning to a consideration of instruction No. 20, it was to the effect that appellant could not recover if the flood that caused the damage was unusual, extraordinary and unexpected. “Unusual” is defined as meaning “not frequent, not common, rare, strange.” “Extraordinary” is defined as meaning “not of the usual, or customary or regular kind; exceeding the common degree or measure.” Century Dictionary. Each of these words is practically synonymous of the other. If a phenomenon is unusual it is out of the ordinary and therefore extraordinary. The applicability of the words “unusual and extraordinary” presupposes the happening of incidents that are usual and ordinary and of other incidents that are exceptional in nature, but that have occurred and that may reasonably be expected to occur again, but which, by reason of their exceptional nature and when measured by that which is common, are designated as “unusual and extraordinary.” It is said that the word “extraordinary” does not mean what has never been previously heard of, or within former experience, but only what is beyond the ordinary, the usual, or the common. The Titania (1883), 19 Fed. 101. It is said also that the term “unusual” is scarcely strong enough to describe a freshet so outside of ordinary experience that its occurrence was not reasonably *410to be expected. Broadway Mfg. Co. v. Leavenworth, etc., Bridge Co. (1910), 81 Kan. 616, 106 Pac. 1034, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 156. It is held also that an “unusual flood of rain” does not indicate a greater or more severe rain than has theretofore occurred, but rather such a rain as occurs rarely and not -usually. City of Denver v. Rhodes (1886), 9 Colo. 554, 13 Pac. 729.

It is our judgment that, to be strictly accurate, the terms “unusual” and “extraordinary” when considered from an etymological standpoint, as well as when measured by popular usage, are both comprehensive and flexible in meaning. They include all occurrences, events and phenomena that are beyond the usual and the ordinary. An incident that has occasionally occurred, although exceptional in nature, may on its reoccurrence be properly characterized as unusual and extraordinary. Also an event the like of which has never previously occurred, and respecting which there is no reasonable ground for expecting it to occur again, may on its occurrence likewise properly be designated as unusual and extraordinary.

13. 14. It is by reason of the comprehensiveness and flexibility in meaning of the terms under discussion that we are forced to condemn the instruction under consideration. The instruction by the use of such words unqualified and unexplained outlined a defense broader than the law recognizes. In such a case as is presented here the defendant may be liable although the flood that concurred with some act of, his was unusual and extraordinary in nature. In such a case the defendant may be held liable in damages not only where *411the flood was usual and ordinary .in nature, but also where it may be designated as unusual and extraordinary, provided its occurrence might- have been anticipated by the exercise of reasonable skill and foresight. Vandalia R. Co. v. Yeager, supra.

We believe that the qualifying clause is a correct statement of the real test: If the flood under investigation was of such a nature that, in view of all the facts, the exercise of reasonable skill and foresight should have led to its being anticipated, there may be liability. If it was of such a nature that it could not reasonably have been expected to occur, proper care, diligence and foresight being exercised, there is no' liability. Such being the test, the fact that the flood was or was not extraordinary or even unprecedented in nature is of itself and as an independent consideration unimportant. The nature of the flood as usual or unusual, ordinary or extraordinary, is important only as an element in determining whether or not it should have been, anticipated.

15. 16. *41217. *411As we have indicated, we do not believe that the mere fact that the flood was unprecedented can be said, as matter of law,, to form the basis of an escape from liability. A flood is unprecedented if it is somewhat higher or somewhat more destructive than any preceding flood. If a flood of a certain water elevation or of a certain destructive force has occurred, it is not unreasonable to anticipate that a like combination of the forces of nature may produce a similar flood. Neither can it be said as a matter of law that some other combination of the forces of nature, aided by topographical and other changes incident to an advancing civilization and the like, may not produce a flood *412somewhat greater than any flood that preceded it, and hence the soundness of the rule of reasonable anticipation. We make these observations by reason of the language of certain other instructions. In Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Ramey (1891), 139 Ill. 9, 28 N. E. 1087, 32 Am. St. 176, the Supreme Court of Illinois collects and reviews the decisions to the effect that, in cases similar to the one at bar, the fact that the damages resulted from an extraordinary flood is of itself immaterial in the absence of the qualification that the flood was so great or extraordinary that it could not have been reasonably anticipated. To the same effect is Gulf, etc., R. Co. v. Pomeroy (1887), 67 Tex. 498, 3 S. W. 722. In such cases it is incumbent on him who obstructs a stream, in order that he may be found to have exercised due care, that he take notice of the character of the country, and that he provide ample accommodation for the free passage of the water at all seasons of the year, in view of the character of the country. New York, etc., R. Co. v. Hamlet Hay Co., supra.

18. He is also required to take notice of the effect of improvements in the way of clearing the lands of forests and constructing artificial drainage. Ev-

ansville, etc., R. Co. v. Scott, supra; Dunn v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., supra; Fordham v. Northern Pacific R. Co., supra. See, also, Crawford v. Rambo, supra; Greeley Co. v. Von Trotha (1910), 48 Colo. 12, 108 Pac. 985; Bristol Hydraulic Co. v. Boyer, supra; Northern Ind. Land Co. v. Brown, supra.

19. *41320. *412It is apparent from what has been said that we cannot approve the use of the word “unexpected” unqualified as in the instruction. Appellee in its brief has called our attention to no instruction supplementing, or given in explanation of, *413instruction No. 20. At this point it is proper to notice appellee’s contention that under the rules we are not authorized to consider any question respecting instructions, for the reason that appellant has not set out in his brief all the instructions- in full. The rule is otherwise. An appellant is required to set out in his brief only the instructions with respect to the giving or refusal of which he complains. “If the error, with which appellant claims the instructions set out in its brief are impressed, are in any manner obviated or cured by the other instructions given in the case, the duty devolves upon appellees, under rule twenty-two, to call the attention of the court to such fact or facts, citing the court to the pages and lines where the instructions upon which they relied for that purpose might be found.” Simplex, etc., Appliance Co. v. Western, etc., Belting Co. (1909), 173 Ind. 1, 88 N. E. 682; Waters v. Indianapolis Traction, etc., Co. (1916), 185 Ind. 526, 113 N. E. 289.

21. The nineteenth instruction was in substance that, if the jury should find that appellant’s damages were caused in some other way than by obstructions which appellee placed in the natural channel of "White river, or than by the manner in which it erected its trestles on its right of way, appellant could not recover, and that the verdict must be for appellee. It seems to us apparent that this instruction is somewhat obscure when considered in the light of the complaint and the evidence, and also that it is too narrow when measured by the allegations and proof. The expression ‘1 natural channel ’ ’ might have been, and probably was, understood by the jury to have reference to the low-water channel, since that is *414popularly referred to as the natural channel. Liability, however, as we have seen, might be predicated on damages caused by obstructions placed in either the low-water or the high-water channel, or both. It is at least doubtful whether the instruction is sufficiently broad to include the alleged fact that insufficient openings were left in the embankment, and we believe it to be plain that it does not cover the alleged wrongful and negligent act of constructing and maintaining the embankment of light material easily washed away by water. We believe that it was error to give this instruction. Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Christie (1912), 178 Ind. 691, 700, 100 N. E. 299; Kelly Atkinson Constr. Co. v. Munson (1913), 53 Ind. App. 619, 101 N. E. 510; Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Stein (1894), 140 Ind. 61, 39 N. E. 246.

The twenty-ninth instruction was as follows: “The defendant, is not liable for the act of God, and by act of God is meant not only natural accidents such as lightning, earthquakes and tempests, but also it embraces all other unavoidable, and inevitable accidents.”

22. *41523. *414We believe that this instruction as applied to the facts of this case was both erroneous and of harmful tendency. While floods are not specifically mentioned, they belong to the same general class as lightning, etc., which are specifically mentioned. Floods, especially when extraordinary in volume and force, are, in a legal sense, embraced by the term “acts of God.” It results that, by the general language used, the court must have intended to include floods and the jury must have so understood. Otherwise the instruction was not applicable to the case. The instruction then was to the effect *415that appellee was not liable for the consequences of the flood. In such a case as this, however, a defendant .may be liable for the damages caused by the waters of a flood. In its relation to resulting damages a flood is classed.as an act of God in a legal sense with the consequent immunity of man from liability, only in the absence of human agency wrongfully or negligently contributing to produce the injury complained of. Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Woodbury Glass Co., supra.

24. Where the injury complained of is to some extent the result of the wrongful or negligent participation of man, the consequences are regarded as exclusively of human origin in so far as concerns the question of liability, and the situation is removed from the scope of the rules that govern in case of the acts of God. Willson v. Boise City (1911), 20 Idaho 133, 117 Pac. 115, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1158.

25. In a case involving an act of God, but where a human agency negligently applied intervenes to produce the injury, the act of God is regarded as the remote rather than the immediate cause of the injury, and recourse cannot be had to it as a legal excuse. Sprowl v. Kellar (1833), 4 Stew. & P. (Ala.) 382; New Brunswick Steamboat, etc., Co. v. Tiers (1853), 24 N. J. Law 697, 64 Am. Dec. 394.

Where lands were damaged by the overflow of waters from a canal, and where the overflow would not have occurred but for the negligent act of the canal owner in permitting a sand bar to form in the canal, the injury cannot be attributed to an act of God. Chidester v. Consolidated Ditch Co. (1881), 59 Cal. 197.

In the ease at bar, if negligence may not be attrib*416utecl to appellee in failing to anticipate the occurrence of a flood of the nature of the one involved here, if appellee’s work as constructed and maintained was reasonably sufficient and proper in view of what should have been anticipated in the exercise of due care, that is, if appellee was guilty of no negligent or wrongful conduct in the premises, then it would appear that the injury to appellant’s property resulted from an act of God without the intervention of human agency. But if, in constructing and maintaining the work, negligence in act or omission must be ascribed to appellee, and such negligence intervened to produce the injury, then appellee may not escape liability by appealing to the rules that control in case of an act of God. See 1 O. J. 1174, and notes.

Other questions presented are not considered or decided. Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain the motion for a new trial.

•Dausman, C. J., Batman, P. J., Ibach and Pelt, JJ., concur. Hottel, J., not participating.