Lively v. Virginian Railway Co.

140 S.E. 51, 104 W. Va. 335, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 203
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1927
Docket5814
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 140 S.E. 51 (Lively v. Virginian Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lively v. Virginian Railway Co., 140 S.E. 51, 104 W. Va. 335, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 203 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

This action was brought by plaintiff against defendant some time prior to September 1925 for damages sustained by the alleged wrongful acts of the defendant, particularly set forth in the two counts of the declaration. In the-first count, it is averred that the plaintiff prior to the alleged trespass was the owner of certain tracts or parcels of land near Long Branch Station in Fayette County, bordering also on the right of way of the defendant’s main line of railroad, the said right of way having been acquired from the plaintiff and others by condemnation proceedings instituted in the circuit court of Fayette County; that in grading and constructing its road-bed, defendant raised the same to an elevation of six or eight feet above the level of the surrounding lands, so that the waters from the streams, creeks, ravines, and surface water from the mountain side were thereby diverted from their regular or original courses and thrown on plaintiff’s land, by reason of which wrongful acts said waters were caused to spread over practically ten acres of the fields and land of the plaintiff and to cover the same with water, and with sand, slate and other debris, rendering it unfit for agricultural purposes, all of which was theretofore very rich and valuable farm land, and constituted in fact practically all of the good farm land plaintiff possessed; whereby it be *338 came necessary for plaintiff to expend, and he did expend, large sums of money and labor, amounting’ to $1,000.00, in draining and trying to carry off said water so unlawfully turned, diverted and discharged -over and on his said land; and whereby it has now become impossible to drain said waters so discharged and diverted from their natural courses, or to remove therefrom the stone, slate, gravel and other debris so deposited, to his damage of $25,000.00.

The only cause of action pleaded in the second count, in addition to what is alleged in the first, is that defendant in .building and preparing its railroad bed had constructed culverts thereunder which were insufficient in capacity to carry away the waters; and whereby they were dammed up and diverted from their regular course and overflowed plaintiff’s said land, rendering it unfit and useless for cultivation; whereby plaintiff was damaged in the manner alleged in the first count thereof.

The defendant’s pleas were not guilty, and a plea in bar, that the judgment obtained by plaintiff in a former suit against the Long Branch Coal Company was for damages for substantially the same injury complained of in this action.

On the trial of this action in April 1926, the plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment against the defendant for $500.00; and to that judgment we awarded the present writ of error on the petition of the railroad company. The several assignments of error relied on here are: (1) the refusal of defendant’s instruction No. 8, which would have directed the jury to find for the defendant; (2) the overruling of defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict and grant it a new trial; (3) the overruling of defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment; (4) the giving- to the jury over defendant’s objections plaintiff’s instructions Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6; (5) the refusal of the court to give defendant’s instructions Nos. 9 and 10, and also instruction No. 4 as requested, and in modifying the same and giving it as modified; (6) in permitting plaintiff, Lively, to testify in his own behalf that the reason why the deposit remained in the mouth of Long Branch was because there was no current to carry it off as fast as’ it came in.

*339 Defendant rests its defense mainly upon the proposition covered by its instruction No. 8 and presented by its first assignment of error. That instruction would have told the jury upon the pleadings and proofs introduced to find a verdict for defendant. Should the court have so advised the jury? The plea in bar referred to, to describe it more particularly, averred that the plaintiff recovered from the Long Branch Coal Company in 1924 a verdict for $750.00 which sum was paid to the plaintiff by the said coal company, and that the damages recovered in that suit were the same alleged damage and injuries complained of in this suit, and that said sum of money fully and adequately covered any and all damages sought to be recovered in this suit, and constituted a release and discharge of defendant for all the matters pleaded in this case.

On the pleadings and the evidence in this case, we are disposed to hold that instruction No. 8 should have been given for various good and substantial reasons; first, because of the admissions of fact and the judicial admissions of the plaintiff shown in the record. In his declaration in his suit against the Long Branch Coal Company, a part of the present record, he averred that the damages complained of in this case were wholly the result of the alleged negligence of the coal company in the deposit of large quantities of earth, stone, slate slack, coal and other refuse from its mines into Long Branch, a tributary of Paint Creek, and whereby the waters of said branch were dammed up and caused to overflow his lands as described. And in his testimony before the jury in the present case, he admits that after the building of the defendant’s railroad through his lands, and the changing of the channel of Paint Creek, and the building of the culvert referred to in the declaration, all in 1905, and for the several years that elapsed thereafter, and up until 1914, when the acts of the coal company were committed, he had sustained no damage from overflow of the waters from the creek or other streams mentioned; and that it was not until some two years thereafter, after the said coal company had begun operations on Long Branch and above the mouth thereof, and had deposited the earth, slack, and other refuse from its mine along, said *340 branch, and the same were washed down by the waters therein into the old channel of'Paint Creek, that his lands were thereby damaged, and that he had so testified on the trial of his suit against the coal company. So that having so testified then and in this case, and having so pleaded the facts in his suit against the coal company, he is now bound by such admissions and precluded from again recovering in this action for the same damages against the railroad company.

It is alleged in the present declaration that the rights of the railroad company through the plaintiff’s land were acquired by the exercise of eminent domain and condemnation proceedings. Presumably the construction of the railroad was in accordance with the petition and judgment thereon in those proceedings. There is no allegation here that the railroad was not built in accordance with the rights condemned, and that the damages awarded the plaintiff covered the land actually taken and all consequential damages that might result from a proper and reasonable exercise of those rights; and it is not alleged in the pleadings or proven that there was any departure by the railroad company from the rights acquired by the judgment in those proceedings. Monongahela Valley Traction Co. v. Windom, 78 W. Va. 390. Moreover, there is no evidence here justifying the theory that the building of defendant’s railroad contributed in any way to the damages done by the subsequent negligent acts of the coal company.

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.E. 51, 104 W. Va. 335, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lively-v-virginian-railway-co-wva-1927.