Court Opinion

ID: 3659259
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:11:26.358404+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:54:23.026362
License: Public Domain

Civil action to restrain nuisance, later converted into an action to recover permanent damages.
In the operation of defendant's hosiery mill, dyestuffs are emptied from its vats into Rock Hole Creek, which flows through plaintiff's lands two miles from defendant's mill. The case is not unlike Nance v. FertilizerCo., 200 N.C. 702, 158 S.E. 486.
Over objection, plaintiff was allowed to testify that his cows gave less milk "since the dyestuffs were emptied into the creek than they did before that time." The court admitted the evidence with the statement that he would strike it out unless later made competent.
In charging the jury, the court stated: The plaintiff alleges that the waters became contaminated; "that they (the dyestuffs) were deleterious and poisonous," etc. (Exception.) And further: Plaintiff contends that the cows were forced from necessity to drink the water; that it affected their milk, their milk-giving qualities; and "that the calves were born with something wrong with them, that they were unable to stand or walk and born blind." (Exception.)
The jury answered the controverted issues in favor of the plaintiff and assessed the damages at $350.00. From judgment thereon the defendant appeals, assigning errors.
We need not pause to inquire whether error was committed in the admission of evidence, which the court stated would be stricken out unless its competency later appeared, for, upon the record *Page 662 
as presented it would seem that the summation of the complaint, "the dyestuffs were deleterious and poisonous," when no such allegation appears therein, and the recitation of the contention, "the calves were born with something wrong with them, they were unable to stand or walk and born blind," when there was no evidence to support such a contention, brings the case within the principle announced in S. v. Love, 187 N.C. 32,121 S.E. 20, to the effect that where, by the action of the court, evidence material to the issue, which has been excluded, is placed before the jury, without opportunity to answer it or in any way to meet it, necessitates a new trial.
Evidence relative to the condition of the young calves was heard by the judge in the absence of the jury, and excluded as being incompetent, so we were told on the argument, yet in delivering his charge to the jury, the judge gives this excluded evidence as the basis of one of plaintiff's contentions. The testimony undoubtedly found lodgement in the court's mind, and to have called the matter to his attention, as a correctable inadvertence, would only have served to emphasize the error. Bank v.McArthur, 168 N.C. 48, 84 S.E. 39; Medlin v. Board of Education,167 N.C. 239, 83 S.E. 483; Speed v. Perry, ibid., 122, 83 S.E. 176;S. v. Whaley, 191 N.C. 387, 132 S.E. 6; S. v. Cook, 162 N.C. 586,77 S.E. 759; S. v. Dick, 60 N.C. 440. Where the judge himself fails to disregard incompetent evidence, or to eradicate it from his own mind, it would seem to be asking rather much to require a higher standard of the jury. Its harmful effect is obvious. Credit Corp. v. Boushall,193 N.C. 605, 137 S.E. 721; Morton v. Water Co., 169 N.C. 468,86 S.E. 294.
For the error, as indicated, the defendant is entitled to another hearing. It is so ordered.
New trial.