The defendant’s track and right of way extends through the plaintiff’s 160 acres of land diagonally. In 1902 the company contracted with one Stoddart to remove •the earth from certain cuts, including that in the portion of the right of way mentioned, and fill the approaches of a bridge near Melbourne. The complaint is that in doing so the earth was taken on each side of the track beyond the line between plaintiff’s land and the right of way, “ to a distance of 10 feet, . . . to a depth of . . . averaging 12 feet, . . . about a distance of 225 rods,” leaving the adjacent land without support and worthless for about 10 feet farther; that at places the sides of the cut were left perpendicular to a depth of 25 feet, and that the land will be likely to crumble and fall off 37% feet back; and that defendant has placed the right of way fence entirely on the plaintiff’s land: The witnesses agree in saying that dirt was taken from beyond the right of way line, but differ as to the amount and area from which removed.
1. Negligence of servant: liability of master. The work was done by Stoddart under the contract, and it is contended' that this constituted him an independent contractor. In that event he cannot be said to have been agent °f the defendant, and it would not be responsible for the injury. An independent contractor is one who undertakes to do a piece of work according to his own methods, and without being
Tbe contractor agrees to do and furnish'all work, tools, supplies, machinery and equipment of every kind necessary to do all tbe grading required for filling Melbourne bridge at Melbourne, Iowa, except one hundred (100) feet on each side of tbe center line of tbe Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company’s crossing. The material for tbis filling shall be taken out of a cut south of Melbourne and between stations 700 and 740, or any other cut designated by tbe chief engineer of tbe company’s railroad. Such grading shall be done under tbe direction and to tbe satisfaction of tbe. chief engineer of tbe company and bis assistant, and tbe embankment shall b„e of such width as they shall direct-.
Tbe company was “ to pay tbe contractor nineteen and oner-half (19]/2) cents for each cubic yard of grading done, regardless of tbe length of haul, tbe same to be measured once only by cross-seet-ion in excavation.” All estimates were to be made, by tbe company’s chief engineer and assistant, and payments to be made accordingly. Tbe contractor obligated himself to maintain crossings and fences and beep stock off right of way, and to pay damages to stock or other property or to persons occasioned by bis negligence, and also to save tbe company harmless from all liens; and it was farther agreed that “ tbe contract may be terminated by said chief engineer whenever be shall deem it for tbe best interests of tbe company to so terminate it,” in which event the contractor was to be paid for the work done at tbe rate named. No plans and specifications were attached to tbe contract, and nothing in it indicated tbe result to be attained,
2. Damages: evidence. II. Instead of requiring the witnesses to estimate the market values of the land immediately before and after the injury complained of, the court allowed them to give the difference between such values, without first ^ ? stating the values. While this practice is not to be approved as strictly accurate, it does not, under former decisions, constitute reversible error. Richardson v. Webster City, 111 Iowa, 427; Millard v. Webster City, 113 Iowa, 220.
3. Damages: instructions. III. Appellant requested the court to instruct the jury on the theory that land had been taken b^ defendant; also that the value of that actually taken, only, should be avowed him as damages; and that all the injuries resulting from the operation of the railroad had been adjusted in the sale of the right of way. These instructions were rightly refused. There was no appropriation of the land. The soil, merely, was taken, and the damages were such only as were occasioned by the removal of the soil. The action is in trespass, and not for damages caused by the appropriation of an easement in the exercise of eminent domain; and this is a sufficient answer to the criticism of the instruction for not including some of the features
6. Removal of soil: estimate of damage. IV. After both sides had rested, defendant moved the court to strike out all the evidence relating to injury to the farm as a whole. The excavation extended along both sides a considerable portion of the right of way, an<^ estimating the damages, it was not necessary to do so with reference to narrow strips of land along the railroad track, instead of the entire farm. The universal rule, where diminution in value of real estate is the measure of damages, is to treat the body of land occupied, cultivated, or made use of as a unit, and compute the damage to it as a whole, rather than to some particular part or division of it. See Lough v. Ry., 116 Iowa, 31. This did not preclude the fullest inquiry as to whether what was done would affect any land other than that on which the trespass was actually committed, and, if so, how far back and the extent and character of such injury, present and prospective. Thompson v. Ry., 116 Iowa, 215. If it developed that only the -land along the tract .would be affected, there was no impairment to the remainder to be taken into consideration. If, on the contrary, the jury should agree with one of defendant’s witnesses that the excavations did work an injury to the acreage from which no earth was taken,
6. Instructions. V. Several paragraphs of the charge • instructing the jury under what circumstances to find for the plaintiff, if conceded to be erroneous, were not prejudicial, as the undisputed facts were such as to entitle him to a verdict. The exceptions to rulings on the admissibility of evidence are without merit.
7. Damages: evidence; reduction of verdict. The jury assessed the damages at $450, and appellant contends that the allowance was excessive. Cuts existed before the excavations complained of had been made, and the effect of these was to widen such cuts by the actual appropriation of the dirt from less than an acre of ground, leaving the sides nearly perpendicular. Some of plaintiff’s witnesses testified on the theory that more of the surface had been disturbed, but they did not pretend to know. The two who measured found the widest place between the banks 113% feet, and the narrowest 100% feet, and estimated the average width 106 or 107 feet, and an average of 10 or 12 feet deep. The defendant’s engineer found the widest place 115.7 feet, and the deepest 18% feet. He computed the land actually taken at one-eleventh of an acre, and up to the fences as replaced at. two-fifths of an acre. As the right of way was 100 feet wide, it is apparent that the strips of earth removed were very narrow. But the witnesses agree that enough is likely to fall or wash in from the sides, so that the upper edge of the cut will recede 1% times as far as the cut is deep. Including this, however, there are no data in the record for estimating the surface rendered unfit for farming purposes, including space for the location of a fence, not to exceed two acres in all. There were no buildings on the land, and its value did not exceed $75 per acre. The plaintiff’s witnesses thought that the excavations injured the remainder of the farm, but their reasons for this were decidedly hazy. One suggested that' gullies would wash out, but how this would be any more likely