Court Opinion

ID: 8827359
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 15:50:53.229392+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:49.364904
License: Public Domain

WOODS, Circuit Judge.
The plaintiffs, O. S. Hare, Rush Elkins, Mary E. Elkins, and Nannie H. Wainwright, recovered judgment for $7,500 against the defendant, Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, for damage to their land alleged to have been caused by the obstruction of the Guyandotte river.
Gilbert, a town of about 500 inhabitants, is situated mainly on the east side of the river. On the west side the plaintiffs in 1920 had laid off into lots and streets about 20 acres of land, 5.51' acres of which was bottom land on the river. They expected to develop these lots *946into a town called Black Pine, but none of the lots had been put on the market or sold. A footpath and ford constituted the only means of crossing the river to the railroad, hut the plaintiffs contemplated the construction of a road and bridge. The plat of the projected town had not been recorded; and the land had not been returned for taxation as town property, but was assessed as a tract of land at a valuation of $30 an acre.
On the east side of the river the railroad company in 1916 began the construction of a branch or extension of its road to Gilbert. In the construction of its roadbed the railroad company blasted a cliff which fell into the river. According to the testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs, this obstruction of the flow on the east side forced the current from the east to the west side, against the property of plaintiffs; and the river began to erode the banks of plaintiffs’ land. In January, 1919, a great flood in the river carried away timber, washed away .72 of an acre/ and ran over and carried the soil from about an acre and a half of plaintiffs’ land. The washout cut across the streets at the point where the bridge was to be huilt and compelled a replanning of the projected town. When the new plan was made, including a bridge further down the river, it was found that the elevation of the bridge at one en’d would be so great as to make the plan impracticable. The plaintiffs’ evidence was to the effect that the obstruction in the river caused the washouts and that in consequence the plaintiffs, to their great damage, had been prevented from using their property as a town site.
The evidence on behalf of defendant tended to show that the real cause of the overflow and washing of plaintiffs’ land was the breaking of an ice gorge by an almost unprecedented flood. To meet this defense plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that the ice gorge was too far away to cause the overflow, and that it had gone out before material damage had been done to the land. On this conflict of evidence the court was obliged to submit to the jury the issue of defendant’s liability.
A number of witnesses testified as to the amount of the damage. On behalf of the plaintiffs some of them, over defendant’s objection, were allowed to include in their estimate the future damage to the land to be expected from the obstruction and the consequent impairment of its present market value. This testimony was incompetent. Where a railroad company, by temporary or permanent structures or fills built in a stream, obstructs the channel, and thereby diverts the regular flow of the waters therein, resulting in occasional damages to the lands of a riparian owner, such damages in contemplation of law are impermanent, intermittent, and temporary, as distinguished from permanent damages, aná recovery therefor is limited to the damages as from time to time they occur. Covert v. C. & O., 85 W. Va. 64, 100 S. E. 854; McHenry v. Parkersburg, 66 W. Va. 533, 66 S. E. 750, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 860. But admission of this evidence was harmless, because it was taken entirely away from the consideration of the jury. The District Judge at least three times repeated the explicit instruction to the jury that they should not include in their verdict future or *947prospective damages and that they should disregard evidence on that subject. In Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy, 102 U. S. 451, 459, 26 L. Ed. 141, the court says:
“The charge from the court that the jury should not consider evidence which had been improperly admitted was equivalent to striking it out of the case. The exception to its admission fell when the error was subsequently corrected by instructions too clear and positive to be misunderstood by the jury. The presumption should not be indulged that the jury were too ignorant to comprehend, or were too unmindful of their duty to respect, instructions as to matters peculiarly within the province of the court to determine. It should rather be, co far as this court is concerned, that the jury were influenced in their verdict only by legal evidence. Any other rule would make it necessary at every trial, where an error in the admission of proof is committed, of which error the court becomes aware before the final submission of the case to the jury, to suspend the trial, discharge the jury, and commence anew. A rule of practice leading to such results cannot meet with approval.” Hopt v. Utah. 120 U. S. 430, 438, 7 Sup. Ct. 614. 30 L. Ed. 708; City of Charlotte v. Atlantic Bitulithic Co. (4th Circuit) 228 Fed. 456, 461, 143 C. C. A. 38; Oates v. United States (4th Circuit) 233 Fed. 201, 204, 147 C. C. A. 207.
The exception to this general rule is that the error will not be considered corrected when it appears to the appellate court that the impression made by incompetent evidence was prejudicial and too deep to be removed by an instruction to disregard it. Throckmorton v. Holt. 180 U. S. 552, 21 Sup. Ct. 474, 45 L. Ed. 663; Frey v. Welch Grape Juice Co. (4th Circuit) 240 Fed. 114, 117, 153 C. C. A. 150. But here it is evident from the verdict that no such impression was made by the incompetent evidence. The witnesses for the plaintiffs estimated the damages at from $25,000 to $30,000, and the verdict was little more than one-fourth of that amount. It is an important consideration, too, that the District Judge directed the special attention of the jury to the difficulties and expense that would be necessary in the development of the land into town lots of value, and with elaborate care cautioned them against taking into account speculative or merely hoped for future value.
The defendant complains of the improper admission of conversations and correspondence of the plaintiff Hare with Charles Bronson. because there was no evidence that Bronson was the representative of the defendant authorized to deal with the plaintiffs. Assuming the' testimony to be incompetent, we are unable to see that it had any influence on the result. Taking it as a whole it ¿mounted to nothing more than an expression by Bronson of his opinion that the defendant would compensate the plaintiffs if it had unlawfully inflicted injury. It is to be presumed that the president of the road would have expressed the same opinion.
On the whole, the record shows that every right of the defendant was carefully guarded on the trial, and that there is no ground for reversad.
Affirmed.