MacKey v. Board of County Commissioners

341 P.2d 1050, 185 Kan. 139, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1959
Docket40,897
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 341 P.2d 1050 (MacKey v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacKey v. Board of County Commissioners, 341 P.2d 1050, 185 Kan. 139, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 408 (kan 1959).

Opinion

*141 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroedeb, J.:

This is an action for damages which was alleged and tried on the theory of trespass. From a verdict and judgment for the defendant on all six counts the plaintiff has duly perfected his appeal to this court.

The twenty-eight specifications of error assigned by the plaintiff concern trial errors consisting of rulings upon the admissibility of evidence, instructions given and refused, and argument by counsel before the jury.

The following statement of facts taken from the evidence presented in the record will serve as a basis for further discussion.

The Board of County Commissioners of Johnson County, Kansas, is the governing body of Indian Creek Sewer Subdistrict No. 1, a public sewer district duly organized under the laws of the State of Kansas. It is located within Johnson County. The Teis Construction Company, Inc., is a Kansas corporation, and was hired by said sewer district to construct underground sanitary sewer lines within the district.

Earl T. Porter and his brother, Audley W. Porter, are owners of property situated in the sewer district and located at the southwest corner of 91st and Antioch Road, containing approximately eighty acres. They also own an additional forty acres north of 91st Street.

The plaintiff, Joe Mackey (appellant), rented the above two tracts of land owned by the Porters early in the year 1955, under a verbal lease which Earl T. Porter testified was by the year, but which the plaintiff testified was for an indefinite duration — that he could remain upon the premises as long as he wanted to until development of houses was started on the property. The plaintiff operates a dairy on the premises and is also engaged in the buying and selling of dairy cattle.

Sometime in 1955, before construction of sewers started on the land in question, the Porters orally granted to the sewer district an easement to construct sewers on said land. This oral conveyance was later confirmed by written instrument dated April 26, 1956. The plaintiff was not notified of said grant to the sewer district prior to the actual entry upon the property by the contractor, Teis Construction Company, Inc.

The contractor entered upon said land on a Wednesday, October 19,1955. In three days he had dug a trench, laid the sewer pipe and *142 then backfilled the trench to a point near the southwest gate of a barn lot of plaintiff’s on the eighty-acre tract in question. Part of the ditch and a manhole excavation near this gate were open on Friday evening, October 21, when the contractor and his employees quit work.

Plaintiff’s employee, George Kueck, did general farm work for the plaintiff on these premises. It was his duty to attend the cows and feed them, and on the evening in question he drove some of the plaintiff’s dairy cattle past this excavation and through the southwest gate of the barn lot. His testimony was that there were no barricades around the excavations.

The plaintiff was absent in Minnesota purchasing cattle when the contractor entered upon the premises on October 19th and did not return home until after dark on Friday, October 21st. That same evening, between the hours of 10:00 and 11:00 p. m., there arrived at plaintiff’s leased premises, by truck from Minnesota, nineteen' head of Holstein cows, which he had purchased on the trip to Minnesota. The plaintiff’s manager, Bob Gifford, Jr., and plaintiff’s employee, George Kueck, were present and aided the plaintiff in the unloading of the cows. These two men were aware that the southwest gate of the barn lot was open and that there were open excavations immediately adjacent or near the gate which they testified were without barricades. George Kueck testified that he did not tell the plaintiff about the ditch or the excavation near the gate because he was afraid the plaintiff would make him fence them.

The plaintiff testified that at the time the Minnesota cattle were unloaded on the evening of October 21, they were examined and found to be in sound condition. On Saturday morning, October 22, when plaintiff arrived at his leased premises, at about 8:00 a. m., he found that his cattle had been injured. Four cows were down and could not get up. The plaintiff testified that two were near the barn and two were down near the ditch. The remainder of the nineteen head were bruised and appeared to be stiff and sore. They were scattered out over the pasture. There were none in the sewer ditch or manhole excavation.

The plaintiff’s witness, Dr. Twiehaus, a veterinarian, testified that the injuries consisted of muscle bruises, open wounds that had gotten infected and bone injuries. The four cows that were down had pelvic injuries, displacement of the hip joint and the like. These pelvic injuries, according to his testimony, were due to some violent *143 accident because it would be very unusual for cattle to hurt themselves in a pasture like these were hurt. ■ “It could have come from a fall.” He recommended that the four cows which were down be destroyed. On cross examination he testified that the injuries occurred from twelve to eighteen hours before he saw the cattle. Four cows, other than those he directed to be destroyed, had premature calves born thirty-six to forty-eight hours after he had treated the cattle. He testified that the injuries could have occurred by reason of the cattle falling into a pit, and in his opinion that was the only way the injuries could have been sustained; that in his opinion the injuries could not have been sustained in shipment. He further testified a cow after receiving a pelvic or hip injury, as four of these cows sustained, would not be able to walk and would not be able to crawl out of a hole or pit ten feet in diameter and between seven to nine feet in depth, unless there would be some gradual incline.

The plaintiff admitted there was a dry stream bed in the pasture with banks five and one-half to six feet high. The plaintiff testified he hired a tow truck to move the two cows that were down near the ditch to the barn. When the driver of the tow truck was called to testify he stated that there was only one cow down, and it was down in the south end of the pasture and was not near any ditch or sewer. He stated that this cow had just given birth to a dead calf and that he did not see any ditch or sewer on the premises.

The contractor on Thursday, October 20, accidentally cut a water line on the premises which ran between the water well and the electric water pump, a distance of approximately two hundred feet. This water line was repaired by the contractor on the same day. Beginning on November 17, 1955, and thereafter, plaintiff had to call a plumber to repair the water pump in question which pumped the water from the well for the cattle. The plumber was called on numerous occasions thereafter but the plumber testified that he never could exactly find the trouble with the pump other than it continually lost its prime. He did not know what caused the pump to lose its prime. The plaintiff’s evidence was that the well which supplied water for the premises after the sewer line was put in would not supply sufficient quantities of water for his needs, although it had done so before.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
341 P.2d 1050, 185 Kan. 139, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackey-v-board-of-county-commissioners-kan-1959.