Chicago, St. L. N. O. R. Co. v. Hicks

61 S.W.2d 37, 249 Ky. 578, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 566
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 2, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 37 (Chicago, St. L. N. O. R. Co. v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, St. L. N. O. R. Co. v. Hicks, 61 S.W.2d 37, 249 Ky. 578, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 566 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This is an action brought in the Hickman circuit court by the appellees, H. A. Hicks, Hettie Hicks (wife of H. A. Hicks), and John Ladd, against the appellants, Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railroad Company and Illinois Central Railroad Company, to recover damages to plaintiff’s crop by overflow of water alleged caused by the improper construction and maintenance of an embankment constructed by the appellant railroad companies. Judgment was recovered against the defendants from which they here appeal.

Hettie Hicks and her husband, H. A. Hicks, were, during the year 1929 and for many years prior thereto, the owners of a certain tract of low lying farming land of some 74 acres, situated in Hickman county.

This tract was traversed along its eastern boundary by a drainage ditch, wherein was received and carried off the water, originating upon the adjoining land lying to the south and southeast and which flowed into this main ditch, extending for some distance southward, through four laterals or drains.

In the years 1925 and 1926, it appears that the appellant railroad companies, defendants below, constructed a railroad line east of and near to appellee’s *580 farm and running north and south, practically parallel with this drainage ditch. In building this line of railroad, these three of four laterals to the main ditch were crossed by it. Passages under the railroad were made to carry the water which gathered east of the road and came in a northwestwardly direction under the railroad embankment into the main ditch extending by appellee’s farm.

Defendants, in building this, its railroad embankment, constructed it of rock, sand, and gravel taken from a nearby hill. The embankment is approximately 30 feet high, 135 feet wide at the bottom and 20 feet at the top, and is constructed, it is allegéd, practically, if not wholly, of sand and gravel, with no dirt or clay of a binding quality to prevent its washing.

During the year 1929, the appellees, plaintiffs below, planted a portion of their 74-acre tract in corn, in a field thereof abutting on the ditch into which, it is alleged, the sand and gravel had so washed down from the embankment, through the small laterals leading into the main ditch, as' to practically fill it in many places and. to render it much more shallow throughout its course, and that, by reason of such obstruction of the ditch, the plaintiffs’ corn field was overflowed and the planted crop thereby destroyed. Plaintiffs again planted their corn about the 1st of June, when it was again likewise destroyed. Thereafter, in May, 1930, after the repeated loss .of the 1929 corn -crop, consisting of 16 acres, plaintiffs filed suit, charging defendants with negr ligenee in. permitting their. embankment to slough into the laterals, from whence the sediment was washed into the main ditch, filling it and causing, they allege, the ovérflow of waters over' their field, resulting in the damage to their crop in the sum of $512.

Further, the plaintiffs filed amended petition, therein alleging that defendants had both carelessly and negligently constructed of loose sand and gravel their railroad embankment and the ditches leading from it, causing the sand and gravel to be washed in.great quantities into the plantiiffs’ ditch but further alleged that the defendants were also careless and negligent in the maintenance of their embankment and that, by reason of their negligent maintenance, as well as their negligent construction of it plaintiffs’ damage complained of occurred. Further they alleged that the injury and damage *581 to plaintiffs’ crop could have been, and conld now be,, easily averted by defendants at a moderate cost, and. recurring damages b.e avoided by a proper construction, and maintenance of their embankment.

Defendants filed .demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition,, which being overruled, they filed answer traversing its. allegations, and also by its second paragraph pleaded, that the embankment complained of was a permanent, structure, giving its dimensions, and that to change-same would destroy defendants’ roadbed, and that it. could not be changed without great and unreasonable-expense exceeding the amount of damages claimed by plaintiffs and also exceeding the value of the entire 74-acre farm. Further, they therein pleaded that their' embankment was constructed and completed more than, five years before plaintiffs’ action was instituted, and. pleaded the statute of limitations as a bar thereto. By-paragraph 3 they answered and pleaded that their embankment was carefully and skillfully constructed and maintained, and asked that “the case be tried once and. for all upon the issue of injury arising from a permanent structure,” so barring recurring actions thereafter.

Plaintiffs filed a demurrer to defendants/ plea of limitations, which was overruled, when they filed a reply denying most of the allegations of the answer, but. did not deny the allegations of the answer that the embankment is a permanent structure or that it is of the-dimensions stated, but only that “the injury sustained, by reason of said embankment is of a permanent nature,” nor did they deny that any remedial changes in the embankment would destroy defendants’ roadbed as alleged by their answer, or that any change in same would cost an amount greater than the amount of damages claimed and greater than the value of plaintiffs ’ entire farm, on which the crops in controversy were grown.

Defendants ’ demurrer .to this reply was overruled. By following pleadings the issues were formed and trial had, when verdict and judgment' thereon was recovered by plaintiffs for $333. A üew trial being refused, the defendants have appealed.

Appellants, by brief of counsel, state that their chief objections to the verdict returned in this case are: (1) That the court erred in failing to give a peremptory instruction, directing the jury to find for them; and (2) that the court should have submitted to the jury by a. *582 proper instruction the question of whether the embank:ment was a permanent or temporary structure and , should also have required the jury to say in their verdict whether they found damages arising from a per:manent or temporary structure; and, further, that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury what •constitutes a “reasonable cost” of making any rem- • edial change in the embankment.

In view of the conclusion we have reached as to the ■error committed by the trial court in refusing to give .an instruction upon the measure of recovery for injuries received from a permanent structure, and in not instructing the jury upon the measure of damages for •such injuries, and in not defining by an instruction what in law constitutes a “reasonable cost” or expense for : making a required change of a permanent structure, it •will be unnecessary to discuss herein but briefly, if at .-all, defendants’ various other assignments of error, ;made in their motion and grounds for a new trial, but :not here further by brief argued or insisted on.

The legal questions thus presented by these contentions upon this appeal illustrate the different theories ■or conceptions of the law entertained in the practice of •cases of this character.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.2d 37, 249 Ky. 578, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-st-l-n-o-r-co-v-hicks-kyctapphigh-1933.