Davenport v. . R. R.

62 S.E. 431, 148 N.C. 287, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 16, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 431 (Davenport v. . R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. . R. R., 62 S.E. 431, 148 N.C. 287, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 187 (N.C. 1908).

Opinion

There was evidence tending to show that defendant companies, having condemned a right of way, proceeded to construct their roadbed through the lands of plaintiff, and that such roadbed crossed a number of lead ditches made by plaintiff for the proper drainage of his lands, and also a number of tap ditches conveying the water of said land to the lead ditches at various points below the defendants' roadbed; that defendants constructed culverts or put in pipes at the points where these lead (289) ditches had passed under the roadbed, but did not make any such drainage for the tap ditches, but in constructing their roadbed, by lateral ditches the water which had been carried by these tap ditches, and also some water from adjacent lands, was conveyed along the side of the roadbed into the lead ditches, and by reason of the increase of water the culverts were not sufficient to carry off the waters of the usual and ordinary rains falling in the vicinity, and by reason of this defect these waters were ponded back upon the lands of plaintiff, causing much damage and injury to plaintiff's lands and the crops growing thereon.

The plaintiff, testifying to his alleged injury and the cause thereof, among other things, said: "The water on the north side of the railroad drains southwardly to a swamp. My land lies between the letters *Page 215 `A' and `D' on the map. Before the railroad was constructed my ditches ran just as they do now. The railroad cut ditches on each side of the track and threw up an embankment or roadbed, and that caused all the tap ditches to fill up, only leaving open the lead ditches at `A', `B' and `C.' The water before that time went southwardly and was carried off by the lead ditches and the tap ditches which drained my land. I cleaned out these ditches in 1893. My father and myself were renters of the land, and I purchased it in 1897. From 1897 we made good average crops for that time. Before the railroad cut the ditches none of the water east of `D' or west of `A' came down on my land, but since then the water for a distance of half a mile east of `A' has come down on my land, and when there has come a big rain it would come down from east of `D.' I think the roadbed is from two to three feet high. The land on both the east and west sides of my land is higher than mine, and the fall of the land is from the north. The conditions, as changed by the railroad, have greatly increased the flow of water on my land, and, the culverts not being sufficient to take it off promptly, the water ponded on my land, and on the south side the ditch would not be sufficient to hold the water. I have seen the water so high that it flowed over the top of the railroad. In (290) 1906 I had in cultivation about 180 acres of corn, cotton, peas and sweet potatoes. There were 68 acres of cotton, 80 acres in corn, 5 in potatoes and the balance in peas."

Witness was here asked: "If the railroad company had left open your drainage as it was before they went there, how much crop would you have made in 1906?" To this question and the testimony in response thereto defendants objected; objection overruled; exception. (Exception 1.)

The witness answered: "I would have made a quarter of a bale of cotton per acre, and I only made seven bales on the 68 acres. Cotton was worth 10 to 11 cents per pound, and the bales weighed 500 pounds each. I would have made three barrels of corn per acre, and only made fifty barrels on about 80 acres. Corn was worth $4 per barrel. The stock peas were not damaged so much. The potato crop was a failure."

Issues were submitted, and responded to by the jury, as follows:

1. "Was the railroad of defendants negligently constructed, and if so, was the water thereby ponded on the lands of plaintiff, as alleged?" Answer: "Yes."

2. "If so, what damage to his lands and crops has plaintiff sustained thereby?" Answer: "Fifteen hundred dollars."

3. "Has the cause of any injury to plaintiff's land in respect to drainage and as complained of by plaintiff been removed, and if so, when?" Answer: "Yes; 28 January, 1908." *Page 216

Motion for new trial by defendants for error of the court in its ruling on the question of evidence as above indicated, and for errors in the charge. Motion overruled, and defendants excepted. Judgment on verdict for plaintiff, and defendants excepted and appealed. after stating the case: In Mullen v. Canal Co.,130 N.C. 496, a case concerning chiefly the rights acquired by condemnation proceedings, Douglas, J., delivering the opinion of the Court, on page 503, said: "It is well settled that no damages are contemplated in the original condemnation, except such asnecessarily arise in the proper construction of the work." And inAdams v. R. R., 110 N.C. 325, Mr. Justice Avery, in declaring the same doctrine, page 330, said: "Whether an easement passed by private sale or condemnation, the estimate of its value is presumed to be made in contemplation of the observance on the part of the corporation of the golden maxim of the law, by so exercising its privilege as to inflict no unnecessary injury on the servient owner. Lewis on Eminent Domain, 571; Angell on Water Courses, 97; ib., 95, 95a; Lillotran v. Smith,32 N. H., 94; Embry v. Owen, 6 Exc. 369; Pugh v. Wheeler, 19 N.C. 50;Walton v. Mills, 86 N.C. 280; Wilhelm v. Burleyson, 106 N.C. 389; Gould on Waters, 209, 214, 401, 405; Hasher v. R. R., 60 Mo., 329; Curtisv. R. R., 98 Mass. 428; Lawrence v. R. R., 71 C. L. Repts., 643; Mills on Em. Domain, 81 (p. 220); Munken v. R. R., 72 Mo., 514; R. R.v. Wicker, supra." And, further, on page 331: "It being admitted as a general rule that such injuries to the servient tenement as are necessarily incident to a skillful construction of the road are considered as included in the compensation for the easement, it is clear that the skill is not to be measured by the cost of the structure alone, but by its completion upon such a location and in such a manner as to provide for the public safety and convenience without unnecessary injury to the land subject to the servitude. When the attempt is made to draw and define the line of legal right between two such conflicting claimants, it is essential always to recur to the rule, Sic utere, ut non alicnum laedas, as the touchstone by which the culpability of conduct is to be determined. (292) The persons who fixed the cost of the easement contemplated the building of the structure with an eye to the safety and convenience of the public and subject to this controlling purpose, with a proper regard for the rights of the servient as well as dominant owner."

Apply these principles, it is generally held that, for damages incident *Page 217 to the negligent construction of a company's road, recovery may be had, though a right of way has been purchased or regularly acquired by the condemnation proceedings. The Judge below, having properly informed the jury of this general principle and framed the issue so as to enable them to determine the precise question, among other things and on this issue, charged the jury: "If the jury believe the evidence, there were certain lead ditches upon the plaintiff's land indicated at `A,' `B,' `C,' `D,' on the map, and there were also a number of smaller ditches, called tap ditches, which emptied into the lead ditches.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 431, 148 N.C. 287, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-r-r-nc-1908.