Mitchell v. Town of Ahoskie

129 S.E. 626, 190 N.C. 235, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 626 (Mitchell v. Town of Ahoskie) 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
Mitchell v. Town of Ahoskie, 129 S.E. 626, 190 N.C. 235, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 53 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

CoNNOR, J.

The judgment by default and inquiry established plaintiff’s cause of action as alleged in his complaint, and his right to recover of defendant at least nominal damages. Both plaintiff and defendant are concluded by said judgment as to all matters alleged in the complaint as a basis for plaintiff’s right of recovery. The cause of action set out in the complaint, and adjudged by the court to be well founded, both in fact and in law, determines the measure and character of damages which the plaintiff is entitled to recover therein from defendant. He is entitled to damages which flow from or arise out of said cause of action- — no more and no less. The amount of these damages, to be ascertained by the jury from evidence relevant to an appropriate issue, only, is left open for inquiry. C. S., 596. Hill v. Hotel Co., 188 N. C., 587; Armstrong v. Asbury, 170 N. C., 160; Plumbing Co. v. Hotel Co., 168 N. C., 577; Graves v. Cameron, 161 N. C., 550.

In Blow v. Joyner, 156 N. C., 140, Justice Holee quotes from the opinion of this Court in McLeod v. Nimocks, 122 N. C., 438, with approval, the following: “The judgment by default and inquiry, the defendant having said nothing in answer to plaintiff’s complaint, was conclusive that the plaintiff had a cause for action against the defendant of the nature declared in the complaint and would be entitled to nominal damages without any proof.” The learned Justice further says: “The statement sometimes made that a judgment of this kind 'merely admits a cause of action, while the precise character of the cause of action and the extent of defendant’s liability remains to be determined,’ simply means, as stated, that a judgment by default and inquiry establishes a right of action in plaintiff of the kind stated in the complaint, and entitling plaintiff to nominal damages, but the facts and attendant circumstances giving character to the transaction and relevant as tending to fix the quantum of damages, must be shown.”

It appears from the allegations of the complaint that plaintiff is now and has been for many years the owner of a farm lying within or adjacent to the corporate limits of the town of Ahoskie. During September, 1920, defendant, as a municipal corporation, was engaged in .the construction of a water and sewer system for the benefit of said town and its inhabitants. It desired to extend its sewer line from *237 tbe south end of West Street in said town through plaintiff’s farm to Ahoskie Swamp, where the discharge from said sewers would be carried off by the flow of said swamp. Plaintiff and defendant on 4 September, 1920, entered into a written contract by which plaintiff granted to defendant, in consideration of the payment to him of $1,000, a right of way for said sewer line, 18 feet wide, running from the south end of West Street through said farm to Ahoskie Swamp. Said right of way was to be used by defendant while the construction of the line was going on and after same was finished.

In his complaint, plaintiff alleges that defendant carelessly, negligently and wilfully failed to extend said sewer line to the run of Ahoskie Swamp, as it had contracted and agreed to do, and that by reason of such failure the contents of the sewer pipe were discharged upon and spread over his land, thus causing a nuisance; the plaintiff’s pasture located upon said farm, in which he kept his milk cows, by reason of the deposits thereon from the sewer was made unfit as a place to keep said cows, the soil being rendered filthy and the water unwholesome by reason of said deposits.

Plaintiff further alleges that the sewer line was not extended to the high-water line of the run of Ahoskie Swamp, as the defendant had contracted and agreed to do, and that resulting from this the contents of the sewer were not carried to the run of Ahoskie Swamp, but were discharged upon plaintiff’s lands and premises, which thereby became polluted, poisoned and rendered unfit for use or occupation by the plaintiff.

The judgment by default having established plaintiff’s right to recover damages, the burden was upon plaintiff to offer evidence at the trial upon the issue submitted to the jury. He testifiéd that the distance from the street to Ahoskie Swamp is about 1200 yards; that the sewer line has never been carried to the run of the swamp; that it 'now terminates in his field about 400 yards south of Church Street- and about 250 yards southwest of his residence. He testified fully as to the conditions thus caused upon his land. The sewer line as constructed by the defendant ends in a little bog that makes up from the swamp. The sewage is deposited in this bog and causes a nuisance.

The mayor of the town of Ahoskie, testifying as a witness for the defendant, said: “The town has not had the money to carry the sewer line to the run of the swamp, and in all probability it would have been extended if the money had been available.”

The court instructed the jury that the measure of damages was the difference between the actual market value of the land with the sewerage connections as put down, and the actual value with the sewerage pipes installed according to the contract; that the burden was upon the plaintiff t6 satisfy the jury on these facts — the value of the land as it *238 was when sewerage was put down and wbat it would have been at that time if the contract had been complied with. To this charge plaintiff excepted and assigned same as error. His Honor, over objection of plaintiff, included in the judgment as signed, the following words: “Payment of this judgment shall vest in the defendant the right to permanently maintain its sewer line as it now is.” To the judgment as signed, plaintiff excepted and assigns same as error.

Plaintiff’s contention is that it was error for his Honor, in his instruction to the jury as to the measure of damages and in the judgment which he rendered, to construe plaintiff’s cause of action as one in which he was entitled to permanent damages for property taken by defendant, a municipal corporation, under the power of eminent domain. The right of a plaintiff to recover permanent damages for an entire injury caused by the taking of his property by a corporation upon which the power of eminent domain has been conferred, in certain cases, has been recognized and enforced in this jurisdiction. Ridley v. R. R., 118 N. C., 996; Parker v. R. R., 119 N. C., 677; Harper v. Lenoir, 152 N. C., 728; Moser v. Burlington, 162 N. C., 141; Rhodes v. Durham 165 N. C., 679.

In this case defendant, a municipal corporation, has acquired by purchase the right of way over plaintiff’s land for its sewer line. Its entry upon said right of way and construction of a sewer line thereon was not wrongful. Plaintiff is not seeking further payment for the land upon which defendant maintained permanently said sewer line, nor is plaintiff seeking damages for injury to his land or premises resulting from the permanent maintenance of the said sewer. He demands damages'for injuries caused by defendant’s failure to complete the sewer line by extending it to the swamp. Upon the cause of action set out in the complaint he neither asks for nor is entitled to permanent damages.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 626, 190 N.C. 235, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-town-of-ahoskie-nc-1925.