DocketNumber: 20072
Judges: Brailsford, Lewis, Littlejohn, Moss, Ness
Filed Date: 8/4/1975
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Plaintiff sued Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Corporation for breach of its alleged contract to install a sewage lagoon on plaintiff’s land as part compensation for damage to said land from the construction of a pipeline across it. The jury-found for plaintiff $13,500.00, and Transcontinental has appealed on exceptions which are argued in the brief under five questions. We dispose of these seriatim.
Appellant charges that the Court erred in permitting the introduction of “plans and testimony prepared in 1973 as to a sewage lagoon in violation of the parql evidence rule.”
Plaintiff relies upon an agreement with appellant’s right-of-way agent, evidenced by a 1968 letter to him of the following tenor:
“In connection with a tract of land in Yarennes Township, School District Number Three, Cqunty of Anderson, con
Appellant next complains that the trial judge refused to admit evidence as to the amopnts it paid to other landowners in the same area for surface damages which “should have been admitted to establish proof of what the Defendant was thinking by way of time and money to be expended by the Defendant.” Appellant relates this copiplaint to its contention that there was no meeting of the minds because its agent only intended to commit it to a limited amount of excavation, of the value of about $500.00 or $600.00, whereas, according to, the testimony of plaintiff’s contractor witness, the sewage lagoon demanded by plaintiff would have cost more than $20,000.00.
The third exception complains of the refusal of appedant’s motion for a directed verdict on two distinct' grounds; first, there was no evidence of any consideration for the contract, and, second, there was no- meeting of the minds of the parties as to what appellant undertook tq furnish. Since the motion for a directed verdict rested solely upon the second ground, the first raises no issue for determination on appeal. As to the second ground, we think it apparent that the letter and plaintiff’s testimony required submission qf this issue to the jury.
The fourth exception assigns as error the trial judge’s response to the jury’s request that he define the term sewage lagoon.
Some hour and a half after the case had been submitted to the jury, the jurors returned to the cqurtroom and requested that the judge define the term sewage lagoon. The judge responded by reading the following definition: “A stabilization pond with relatively shallow basin built by excavation qf ground and or dike and are used for the purpose of treating raw, settled, intermediate or secondary domestic sewage affluent by storage under conditions that favor natural biological activity and accompanying bacterial digestiqn which reduces the waste to a stabilized state. The term stabilization pond as herein used is synonymous with the term oxidation pond or sewage lagoon.” The appellant assigns this response as error on two, grounds; first, it was a charge on the facts, and, second, it was irrelevant.
Failing to comprehend how this instruction, the accuracy of which is not challenged, defining a term used in the written memorandum of appellant’s undertaking and frequently in
Finally, appellant complains of the court’s refusal of its motion for judgment non obstante veredicto or fop a new trial upon the ground that “the verdict was not supported by the evidence in the case.” The exception is too general to raise an issue on appeal. Nevertheless, we have carefully considered the pqint argued thereunder in the brief and are satisfied that it is without merit.
Affirmed.