Messick v. City of Hickory

191 S.E. 43, 211 N.C. 531, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 28, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 191 S.E. 43 (Messick v. City of Hickory) 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
Messick v. City of Hickory, 191 S.E. 43, 211 N.C. 531, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 140 (N.C. 1937).

Opinion

*533 ConNOR, J.

Tbe plaintiffs, as appellees, moved in this Court that the appeal of the defendant be dismissed for that the case on appeal was not prepared in accordance with the provisions of C. S., 643, and of Eule 19 of this Court.

An examination of the transcript filed in this Court at the time the appeal was docketed discloses that the case on appeal, upon disagreement of counsel, was settled by the judge. C. S., 644. Plaintiffs’ motion that the appeal be dismissed was therefore addressed to the discretion of this Court. Eule 19 (4). Although the case on appeal was not prepared in accordance with the provisions of the statute (C. S., 643), plaintiffs’ motion was denied. The appeal was heard and duly considered by this Court.

If in the preparation of the case on appeal the provisions of the statute had been complied with, and the case on appeal had been a concise statement of the case, containing only matter reasonably required for the consideration by this Court of defendant’s assignments of error, the defendant would have been spared needless expense for the printing of the record, and the labor of this Court would have been greatly lessened. After examining the transcript filed in this Court, the Court was of opinion that a dismissal of its appeal would be a denial of justice to the defendant. Por that reason, plaintiffs’ motion was denied by this Court in the exercise of its discretion.

On its appeal to this Court, the defendant relies chiefly on its contention that there were errors in the instructions of the court to the jury with respect to the third issue, for which it is entitled to a new trial. Its assignments of error with respect to the other issues have been duly considered. They cannot be sustained. There was no error in the trial with respect to these issues.

The third issue is as follows: “3. What damages, if any, are the plaintiffs entitled to recover on their first cause of action?”

With respect to this issue, the court instructed the jury as follows :

“Now, gentlemen, I refer you to the evidence in this case. The plaintiff has introduced witnesses whose testimony tends to show that plaintiffs’ property was worth $8,000 before the floods of 1934 (assuming that the defendant, the city of Hickory, had had then suitable and proper drainage to, take care of and carry off this overflow of water), and that after the floods (assuming that the defendant, the city of Hickory, in this case will acquire a permanent right or easement to continue its present system of drainage) that the plaintiffs’ property is not worth more than $1,500 or $2,000.
“Now, ordinarily, in a tort action, that is, an action for a negligent wrong, the measure of damages would be the damages that proximately flow or arise as the direct and proximate result of the wrong, or such as *534 could have been reasonably foreseen and anticipated by the defendant. (But this case, although it is being tried as an action for damages, partakes to some extent of the nature of a proceeding for condemnation, for the reason that both sides agree that permanent damages shall be assessed in this case, that is, that whatever the plaintiffs shall recover shall represent past damages, present damages, and prospective damages, and when the case is tried on that theory, and the judgment is signed— in the event you allow the plaintiffs’ damages- — -the effect of it will be to grant the defendant, the city of Hickory, a perpetual easement to maintain its drainage system as it now is, without enlarging it, even though it might be necessary to enlarge it, in so far as the plaintiffs’ property is concerned, and in that class of cases the law has fixed a rule for the measurement of damages which represents the difference in the market value of the property immediately before the injury was sustained and immediately after it was sustained.)
“(Then, what was the market value of the plaintiffs’ property? What was it before the floods of 1934 occurred, assuming that there had been a drainage then sufficient to take care of the rainfall and floods, and then what would be its market value immediately after the floods of 1934, assuming that the defendant, the city of Hickory, has the right to continue its present drainage system, even though it might be ascertained to be insufficient?
“(Now, the amount the plaintiffs are entitled to recover — if you find that they are entitled to recover at all — would be the difference between those two sums. So, I charge you, when you come to answer the third issue, you should answer it in such sum as you may find by the greater weight of the evidence would represent the difference between the market value of the property, as I have defined that to you just before the floods of 1934, assuming that it had drainage sufficient to take care of the overflow and excess water, and what its market value would be after the floods of 1934, assuming that the defendant, the city of Hickory, will acquire at the end of this lawsuit a perpetual right or easement to continue its present drainage system, so far as the plaintiffs’ property is concerned, and you are to fix that amount in dollars and cents, as you may find it to be, that is, the difference between those two sums.)”

The defendant duly excepted to the portions of said instructions which are included within parentheses, and assigns same as error.

At the trial, evidence for the plaintiffs showed that their property had been injured by water, resulting from unusual rainfalls, which had overflowed said property during the months of July and August, 1934, because of the inadequate drainage system which the defendant, the city of Hickory, had caused to be constructed within its corporate limits prior to that time. There was no evidence tending to show any subsequent injuries to said property.

*535 Witnesses for tbe plaintiffs testified that in their opinion plaintiffs’ property would have been worth, on 13 January, 1936 — the date of the commencement of this action — the sum of $8,000, if the drainage system of the defendant had been adequate to take care of and to carry off the water which overflowed said property during the months of July and August, 1934, but that by reason of the inadequacy of said drainage system, the said property at that date was worth only $1,500 or $2,000. Plaintiffs offered no evidence tending to show the value of their property immediately before or immediately after it was injured by the overflow of water during the months of July and August, 1934.

Witnesses for the defendant testified that in their opinion plaintiffs’ property was worth during the months of July and August, 1934, $4,000 to $4,500, both before and after water, resulting from unusual rainfalls, overflowed said property. These witnesses were of the opinion that the injuries to said property, caused by the overflow of water, were temporary and not substantial, and that the value of the property was not affected by such injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.E. 43, 211 N.C. 531, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messick-v-city-of-hickory-nc-1937.