Schafer v. SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY

145 S.E.2d 887, 266 N.C. 285, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1326
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 14, 1966
Docket765
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 145 S.E.2d 887 (Schafer v. SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY) 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
Schafer v. SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY, 145 S.E.2d 887, 266 N.C. 285, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1326 (N.C. 1966).

Opinion

Lake, J.

The undisputed evidence is that the defendant, without permission, entered upon land in possession of the plaintiff and dug a ditch thereon. This being denied in the answer, the court should have submitted to the jury the issue: Did the defendant trespass upon the land of the plaintiff, as alleged in the complaint? The jury should have been instructed to answer the issue in the affirmative if they belifeved the evidence on this point to be true. No such issue was submitted.

The plaintiff was entitled to nominal damages, at least, if the jury found the defendant so entered on the plaintiff’s land and dug the ditch. Matthews v. Forrest, 235 N.C. 281, 69 S.E. 2d 553; Hutton v. Cook, 173 N.C. 496, 92 S.E. 355. A verdict for even nominal damages would carry with it liability for the costs of the action.

There was no error in submitting the issue: “Was the plaintiff’s property damaged by the defendant, as alleged in the complaint?” The only controversy which developed upon the evidence was as to *287 whether the digging of the ditch was the cause of the damage to the plaintiff’s building, there being no conflict in the evidence as to the condition of the building at the time the suit was instituted. It was not error to submit this as a separate issue from the issue as to the amount, if any, which the plaintiff is entitled to recover, nor was there error in the instructions to the jury concerning this issue. However, upon the issue as to the amount the plaintiff was entitled to recover, the court should have instructed the jury concerning his right to recover nominal damages, as above mentioned. This the court failed to do. On the contrary, the jury was instructed that if it answered the issue as to whether the plaintiff’s property was damaged by the defendant “No,” it would not consider at all the issue as to the amount which the plaintiff was entitled to recover. Accordingly, the jury did not answer that issue.

Upon the question of the cause of certain cracking and breaking of the plaintiff’s building, the defendant’s witness Greenwood, found by the court to be an expert in construction engineering, was permitted, over objection by the plaintiff, to answer a long hypothetical question, the material portions of which were as follows:

“[I]f the jury should find from the evidence that in 1946 Mr. Schafer constructed a warehouse building * * *; that the building was in a low area which used to be a marshy area, but the area had been filled in; that the building was constructed with cinder blocks * * *; that the foundation was made of cinder blocks filled in with dirt; that is, the footings were constructed and then the dirt was filled in inside the footings; that the walls were built on a cement floor which was laid on top of fill dirt; * * * that in the Fall of 1960 a ditch was dug from two to four feet wide between the spur track and the building * * *; that the ditch was two to three feet deep, and water stood there in the ditch most of the time; that a horizontal crack appeared in the east wall of the building and that crack extended lengthwise down the building, with the cinder block bulging out or separated at the crack; that some evidence indicated that the crack did not appear until a year or so after the ditch was dug, and >other evidence tended to show that the crack existed before the ditch was dug; that water stood on the spur track and the ditch was dug to drain the water off the spur track; that the ditch was filled in 1962, but the building continued to crack and the long horizontal crack separated more in the last few years; that the natural drain of the water on the west side of the building may have been from south to north, but the water in the ditch did not appear to drain, do you have *288 an opinion satisfactory to yourself as to what could have caused the long horizontal crack in the building and the walls to bulge out?” (Emphasis ours.)

The witness answered that it was his opinion:

“That the building settling, or the cracks along that wall, were created or attributed to inward forces pushing out, along with a portion of the roof structure, creating cracks, but mainly the inward pressure of the dirt kicking the wall out. That is the dirt below the cement floor.”

The witness was then asked to explain his answer and, again over objection, included in the explanation the following:

“To explain exactly what happened, it is like this: The dirt is inside the building, inside the wall, and * * * my opinion is that the inside dirt, the dirt inside of the building, pushed the wall out. The dirt did settle, and the dirt did let the floor down, and the floor went down and kicked the wall out at the bottom. These two things are the two things that happen when we have a dirt settlement inside the retaining wall. That railroad didn’t cause it. The railroad is four feet out, anyway. As the floor sagged and a portion of it went down and the dirt beneath, it gave away, or settled, it rotated. That is what this did. (Emphasis ours.)
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“In my opinion, the ditch did not have anything to do with the horizontal crack in the wall. I have seen similar cracks in buildings where there were no ditches.”

The witness, Greenwood, inspected this building shortly before the trial, which was some five years after the digging of the ditch and the appearance of the cracks in question.

When, as here, an expert witness is called upon to assist the jury by giving his opinion as to the inference or conclusion to be drawn as to the cause of an event, the premise or premises upon which his opinion rests must be made known to the jury, in order that the jury may properly evaluate his opinion as a guide to them in reaching their own conclusion. Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.) § 672; Rogers on Expert Testimony (3d Ed.) § 54. As was said by Moore, J., speaking for the Court in Service Co. v. Sales Co., 259 N.C. 400, 414, 131 S.E. 2d 9:

“The facts upon which an expert grounds his opinion 'must be brought before the jury in accordance with the recognized rules of evidence. When these facts are all within the expert’s *289 own knowledge, he may relate them himself and then give his opinion; or, within the discretion of the trial judge, he may give his opinion first and leave the facts to be brought out on cross examination.’ ”

Here, the witness, Greenwood, inspected the building and stated certain conditions which he observed five years after the digging of the ditch and the appearance of the crack. However, counsel for the defendant did not ask Greenwood to give his opinion as to the cause of the cracking of the wall on the basis of Greenwood’s own observation. He asked for this opinion on the basis of the several hypotheses stated in his question to the witness. These hypotheses leave suspended in uncertainty the very material question of whether the crack appeared before or after the ditch was dug.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.E.2d 887, 266 N.C. 285, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schafer-v-southern-railway-company-nc-1966.