*29Opinion op the Court by
Judge HobsonReversing.
Queen Long and her children live in Logan county, upon a small tract of land situated on the east side of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. She bought the property in the year 1900, and has since lived upon it with her children. It contains about three-fourths of an acre. They make their living mainly by taking in washing. Shortly after they- moved to the place, they dug a well or deep spring on the land near the right of way of the railroad. This spring has since furnished a never-failing supply of water for household and domestic purposes. About June, 1906, one of the trains on the railroad killed a yearling heifer near her place, and the section crew under the supervision of the section foreman buried the carcass on the right of way on the opposite side of the track from the spring, and a little north of it. About a week or 10 days after the heifer w.as buried the water of the spring became very foul smelling and unfit for use. This condition continued for some months. Queen Long and her children brought this action against the railroad company for the pollution of the spring. The land where the animal was buried is higher than the land where the spring is, and the natural drain o.f the surface water was originally toward the spring, but the railroad had made a fill some six or eight feet high between the point where the cow was buried and the spring.- The fill was made when the railroad was built many years ago. The spring is 39 feet from the center of the track of the railroad, and the heifer was buried on the opposite side of the track and on the right of way about 70 feet in a straight line from the spring.. On this proof *30the circuit court dismissed the petition and they appeal.
The plaintiffs produced on the "trial the deed which had been made them for the property. They did not show title from 'the Commonwealth, and. this was unnecessary. They were' in possession. If the defendant had wrongfully polluted their spring, they may recover such damages as they have sustained without showing a title to the land. The defendant set up no claim to the spring, and the person in possession may recover for a trespass or to'rt against a wrongdoer without showing title. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Moore, 101 S. W. 934, 31 Ky. Law. Rep. 141, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 579. The most serious question in the case is whether the proof shows any liability on the part of .the defendant. A person may lawfully bury a dead body on his own land. The railroad company had the fight to bury the heifer on its right of way. It was charged in the petition that the defendant negligently buried the animal so close to - the spring that the water became polluted. There is no proof that the defendant had any reason to-anticipate that the subterranean stream which fed the spring passed near the point where the heifer was buried. It is not shown that the heifer was-not properly buried, and it is manifest from the proof that the decomposed matter from the body of the heifer did not reach the spring on the surface of the ground. Two questions therefore arise for decision: (1) Is the defendant responsible in any event for the pollution of the-spring-from the - body -of' the heifer, although it had no reason-to suppose that -this'result would follow! (2) Is there enough in the evidence to show a want of proper care on the part .of the defendant in burying the heifer as it did!
*311. -In 1 Thompson on Negligence, section 718, the rule is thus stated: “Noxious gases and liquids arising from the carrying on of lawful and necessary occupations are not nuisances in all situations and under all circumstances, but may become such by reason of the trade being carried on in improper localities, or by reason of their being negligently suffered to escape. In the last case the gist of the action consists, not in the doing of the.work, but in the manner-in which it is done.” The later cases seem to support this statement of the law. In Collins v. Chartier's Valley Gas Co., 131 Pa. 143, 18 Atl. 1012, 6 L. R. A. 280, 17 Am. St. Rep. 791, the defendant, in boring a well, turned salt water into the vein which supplied plaintiff’s well and polluted it. It was held by the Supreme " Court of Pennsylvania that whether the defendant was liable or not depended upon whether it knew, or in the exercise of reasonable judgment might have known, that the boring of the well in the way it was done, without shutting off the salt water, would ruin the wells in the vicinity. The court said: “Negligence in this sense is the absence of such care and regard for the rights of others as a prudent and just man would and should have in the same situation. If the plaintiff showed that the injury was plainly to be anticipated, and easily.' preventable with reasonable care and expense, he brought himself within .-the exception of all the cases from Wheatley v. Baugh, 25 Pa. 528, 64 Am. Dec. 721, to Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Sanderson, 113 Pa. 126, 6 Atl. 453, 57 Am. St. Rep. 445, inclusive.” The-same rule was announced by the Supreme Court of Ohio in Columbus Iron Co. v. Tucker, 48 Ohio St. 41, 26 N. E. 630, 12 L. R. A. 577, 29 Am. St. Rep. 528. In Scott v. Longwell, 139 Mich. 12, 102 N W. 230, 5 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 670, the *32Supreme Court of Michigan held that the owner of a mill race is not liable for water percolating from it if he use such care as the circumstances demand of one of ordinary prudence. The same rule applies to fire spreading from the owner’s premises to another's. 1 Thompson on Negligence, section 730. The case of the L. & N. R. R. v. Simpson (Ky.) 33 S. W. 395, 17 Ky. Law Rep. 989, is not inconsistent with the above authorities. In that ease no question appears to have been made as to the defendants not having reason to anticipate the pollution of- the spring. The only question considered in that case was the measure of damages. The case of Kinnaird v. Standard Oil Co., 89 Ky. 468, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 692, 12 S. W. 937, 7 L. R. A. 451, 25 Am. St. Rep. 545, was also entirely different.. In that case the circuit court had instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the defendant. The question before the court is thus stated by it: “The simple question is: Can the owner, with a knowledge of the penetrating character of its oil, and the effects following its leakage, store large quantities of it near the spring of the plaintiff where the oil is--seen in puddles outside of the building, the result of leakage of the casks on the inside, and then resist the claims of the plaintiff on the ground that it did not know that the water was affected by it?” On the other hand, in the case of Tripple State Gas Co. v. Wellman, 114 Ky. 79, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 851, 70 S. W. 49, this court, rejecting the rule laid down in Rylands v. Fletcher, 3 H. L. 330, held. that the liability of the company for an explosion of gas, caused by the escape of the gas from its main, depended upon whether or not the company had exercised such care as the circumstances demanded; and that, unless there was some negligence on the part of the company, it was *33not liable. In Mangan’s Adm’r v. Louisville Electric Light Co., 122 Ky. 476, 91 S. W. 703, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 38, it was held that electric companies are not insurers and are not responsible unless the electricity escapes by reason of a want of such care as the law requires of them. The same rule was applied to telephone companies in Brucker v. Gainesboro Telephone Co., 125 Ky. 92, 100 S. W. 240, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 1162.
If a person who has on his premises fire, water, gas, or electricity is not an insurer, and is only responsible for damages where proper care is not used, certainly a greater liability should not be placed upon one who buries a dead body upon his own land. The rule is universal that the owner may dig on his own land such wells as he needs, although in doing so. he may dry up his neighbor’s well; but that he may not do this maliciously or use the water unnecessarily. Houston & Texas Central R. R. Co. v. East, 98 Tex. 146, 81 S. W. 279, 66 L. R. A. 738, 107 Am. St. Rep. 620, 4 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 827, and note. If the owner of the land may divert the water from his neighbor’s well, it is hard to understand why he should be responsible in damages when, without fault on his part, he accidentally pollutes the water by burying a dead body on his own land without any reason to suppose that the effect of this would be to pollute his neighbor’s spring. The rule is elementary that a person, is not liable for a mere accident which ordinary care on his part could not have anticipated or guarded against. The rule that a man must use his own property so as not to injure his neighbor has never been understood to make one an insurer in the lawful use of his property. If, in the lawful use of his property, a man accidentally does an injury to his neighbor which ordinary prudence would not have *34anticipated to result from his act, it is damnum absque injuria. The law only requires of a man that in exercising his legal rights he shall exercise them with such regard for the rights of others as the circumstances demand of a person of ordinary prudence. There are a few cases in America following the rule laid down in Rylands v. Fletcher, but the entire trend of modem authority is now the other way. This is not the case of a known water course. The pollution oh such a stream, whether under or above ground, rests on different grounds. Nor is it the case of a continuing nuisance, as where the owner continues to permit oil to escape when he knows or has reason to know that it will injure some one’s land. In 1 Shear-man and Redfield on Negligence, section 16, the rule is thus stated: “An accident is inevitable if the person by whom it occurs neither has nor is legally bound to have sufficient power to avoid it: In such a case the essential element of a legal duty is wanting; and it cannot, therefore, be a case of negligence. Therefore no one can be made responsible for damages caused to another by an act which is strictly lawful under all the circumstances, unless he has been negligent in the manner of doing the act. ” We therefore conclude that a person yho buries a dead body on his own land is not .an insurer, and is not liable if his neighbor’s spring is thereby polluted, unless the circumstances are such as to show that a person of ordinary prudence should have anticipated the result which would probably follow.
2. As to the second question, the rule is that where there is room for an honest difference of opinion among intelligent .men as to whether the conduct of the defendant was that 'of an ordinarily prudent man, in view of all the facts and circumstances surrounding *35him, the question is for the jury, although the facts are undisputed. Dolfinger v. Fishback, 12 Bush. 480. Under this rule the peremptory instruction' to find for the defendant should not have been given the jury. The grave was only 70 feet in a straight line from the spring. The slope of the land was downward from where» the heifer was buried to the spring. The dump built by the railroad was built on top of the soil, and did not interfere with the underground drainage. It only kept the surface water from running toward the spring. It had no effect on the water that found its way into the grave of the animal. In most soils it cannot be safely trusted that water will not seep under ground 70 feet, especially in the direction the surface slopes. Whether there was a want of proper care in burying an animal so close to a spring is not a question on which the court can say there is no room for an honest difference of opinion among men of intelligence and a jury of 12 men coming from different walks of life, putting -together their common experiences and practical knowledge of things, are peculiarly qualified to pass upon it. The measure of damages is the diminution in value of the use of the property during the time the water was polluted. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Carter, 77 S. W. 719, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1303. On the return of the case the plaintiff’s may amend their petition so as to include damages sustained since the suit was filed.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial and further proceedings consistent herewith.