Jennemann v. Hertel

264 S.W.2d 911, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1954
Docket28732
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 264 S.W.2d 911 (Jennemann v. Hertel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennemann v. Hertel, 264 S.W.2d 911, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

*912 ANDERSON, Presiding Judge.

This is an action brought by John W. Jennemann and Edna A. Jennemann, husband and wife, against George H, Hertel .to recover the reasonable value of certain property, towit, a peach tree, apple tree, fifteen rose bushes, and a number of iris ■plants, all located on plaintiffs’ land and alleged to have been destroyed as the result of excavating operations carried on by defendant on property adjacent to plaintiffs’ land. In addition, punitive damages were sought in the amount of $5000.

' The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs for $500 actual damages and $1250 punitive damages. Thereafter, the court sustained defendant’s motion for new trial on the ground that it erred in giving and reading to the jury Instruction Number 1. From this order, plaintiffs have appealed.

The allegations of the petition, so far as material to the issues on this appeal, were that the defendant, in March, 1950, undertook to excavate large quantities of earth immediately east of plaintiffs’ property, so that the level of the property being excavated was caused to become several feet lower than plaintiffs’ property; that plaintiffs protested to defendant that such cuts were causing plaintiffs to lose the natural support óf their ground, but that defendant nevertheless continued with the excavating and also dug into the land belonging to plaintiffs, and negligently and carelessly permitted plaintiffs’ land to crumble, crack, and break away; that by reason of such loss of support plaintiffs’ plants, shrubbery and clothes poles have fallen over the embankment, and a fruit tree belonging to plaintiffs was then breaking away from plaintiffs’ land. It was also alleged that the entire side on the eastern border of plaintiffs’ property, and for many feet to the west of said- border, was cracking, crumbling and breaking away from the rest of plaintiffs’ land; that plaintiffs’ driveway was in imminent danger of collapsing, and that the use of the driveway had become dangerous.

It was further alleged that plaintiffs were entitled to the support of their land which was previously afforded by the land east of plaintiffs’ property, and that the support which had been interfered with and taken away by defendant was the natural support of plaintiffs’ land and not the support of plaintiffs’ buildings thereon; that defendant furnished neither temporary nor permanent support to plaintiffs’ land during the course of the excavation, and refused to furnish such support, though often requested so to do.

The prayer of the petition was for $5000 to compensate plaintiffs for the actual damage to their land, and for $5000 punitive damages.

The foregoing allegations of the petition were denied by defendant’s answer.

Plaintiffs are the owners of property known and numbered as 6734 Plateau Avenue in the City of St. Louis. Said property is located on the south side of Plateau Avenue. It has a frontage of 60 feet and a depth of approximately 166½ feet.

Defendant, Hertel, in March, 1950, was engaged in erecting prefabricated houses on the land east of and adjacent to the Jennemanns’ property. A part of this work consisted of clearing off and leveling said ground. The excavation along plaintiffs’ property line consisted of a cut about fourteen inches below the surface of'plaintiffs’ property at the front sidewalk, and increased to a depth of about seven feet at the rear of the lot.

Located on plaintiffs’ property was an iris bed which was, according to plaintiffs’ evidence, about two feet wide and seventy-five feet long. There were also a three year old peach tree, a three year old apple tree, fifteen rose bushes, and a plum tree. The iris bed was on the eastern edge of plaintiffs’ lot, and the plum tree was about two feet from the eastern border of plaintiffs’ land. The record does not show the exact location of the peach tree, apple tree or rose bushes, but from the evidence it *913 could be inferred that they were close to the eastern line of plaintiffs’ lot.

Plaintiff John Jennemann testified that while defendant’s man was operating the excavating machine he “scooped” up the iris bed and took it away entirely, and that they also “took away” the peach tree. When asked about the apple tree, the witness stated: “That was taken out with the scoop as they took the rest of the dirt out.” The roots of the plum tree, located about two feet inside plaintiffs’ property, were bared, and thereafter moved eastward until the tree came to rest about eight inches east of the east line of plaintiffs’ property. The witness did not testify as to how the rose bushes were destroyed.

Mrs. Jennemann testified:

“Q. Did you have roses along the boundary? A. Yes.
“Q. What happened to those? A. Same as the others.
“Q. They went over the line, did they? A. Yes.”

Mrs. Jennemann further testified that the little apple tree “is scooped away”, and that the peach tree “was the same as the apple.” She corroborated her husband’s testimony in that the plum tree moved off their lot.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Jennemann testified that defendant’s operator cut into plaintiffs’ land, the former testifying that at one point defendant cut “three feet inside my line.”

There was evidence on the part of plaintiffs that after the grading started a number of large cracks appeared in plaintiffs’ land. These cracks developed as far as ten or eleven feet from the boundary line, and were an inch to an inch and a half wide. There was also evidence that a large hole appeared in plaintiffs’ driveway which was located a few feet from the border line.

Defendant and Joseph E. Berry, the operator of the excavating machine, both testified that at no time during the operations was there an encroachment of plaintiffs’ land. Defendant stated that the digging and grading “seemed to me about four or five feet from the line.” Like testimony was given by Berry. The latter also testified that the ground was filled along the entire line of Mr. Jennemann’s' property and that in the operations there he never “got down” to any good fresh soil.

Defendant, Hertel, testified that the south half of the land immediately adjoining the property of plaintiffs “consisted of nothing but tin cans, ashes, bed springs,, springs from old automobiles, rubber tires, carbide cans, tin cans, and what not.” .He also stated that the embankment between plaintiffs’ land and the land immediately east consisted of nothing but ashes, which would constantly fall away as the work was-being done. To remedy this situation, Mr. Berry was hired to put in dirt to support the bank. Hertel further testified:

“When Panda Construction Company was digging out all these ashes, cans, and so forth, hauling it away,, naturally, it is not like good earth, it is not solid, and that night a terrific gusher of rain came along, which I had no control of, and caused the bank to fall down, the water caused it to fall down.
“Q. Were there certain parts of the Jennemann property that washed down with it? A. Yes, a very small1 part of it at one point.
“Q. What would you say was the size of that indenture? A.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.2d 911, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennemann-v-hertel-moctapp-1954.