Court Opinion

ID: 7993302
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:33:47.887094+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:27.198089
License: Public Domain

Sykes, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is the second appeal of this ease to this court. The facts are stated in the first report of this case, styled Woods v. Town of Indianola, 114 Miss. 722, 75 So. 549. In that appeal it was decided that the city was guilty of an actionable trespass to appellee in cutting off and taking down the water hydrant in her yard, and was liable to her for damages sustained by her as a proximate result of this trespass.
In the trial of the case in the court below the testimony shows that Mrs. Woods had a hydrant in her *739kitchen and also one in her yard. The city cnt off the one in the yard, bnt left the one in the kitchen. The damages suffered by Mrs. Woods consisted of the inconvenience of not having the hydrant in the yard, and of having to send some of her cows away to be watered, and having to carry water from the kitchen to them Mien they were on her premises. She was annoyed and inconvenienced for a period of four months. Compensatory damages were only recoverable in the case, and the instructions of appellee only for these damages. The jury returned a verdict in appellee’s favor for five hundred dollars. The jury had a right to take into consideration the discomfort, inconvenience, and annoyance suffered by appellee in estimating her damages. Tel. Co. v. Hobart, 89 Miss. 262, 42 So. 349; City of Jackson v. Anderson, 97 Miss. 1, 51 So. 896.
In the Hobart case a judgment for one hundred and fifty dollars was not considered excessive by this court. In the case of City of Jackson v. Anderson, Mrs. Anderson was totally deprived of water in her house and premises for a period of five or six months. In that case a judgment for five hundred dollars was allowed to stand in this court. In the case at bar, however, Mrs. Woods was not deprived of the water in her house, but only of that in the yard, and her inconvenience and damage consequently was nothing like as great as that of Mrs. Anderson. In cases of this kind it is impossible to measure in dollars and cents the damages recoverable.
This, verdict, however, is clearly excessive. After mature deliberation, the maximum amount which we will allow to stand as a recovery is two hundred dollars. If the appellee will remit three hundred dollars, the case will be affirmed; otherwise, it will be reversed and remanded.

Affirmed conditionally.