Reversing.
Answer filed by appellant admitted it was engaged in the strip mining operation referred to in the petition, denied it was guilty of any negligence in its operation and pleaded that damage, if any, caused to appellee was the result of an unusual storm and rain of cloudburst proportions and not by any negligence of appellant.
A reply made up the issues and on the trial the jury brought in a verdict in favor of appellees in the sum of $10,000. Appellant prosecutes this appeal from the judgment based on that verdict.
Reversal is sought on three grounds: (1) That appellant was entitled to a directed verdict; (2) instructions were erroneous; (3) the court erred in refusing to allow the introduction of competent testimony offered by appellant.
Strip mining is not a common practice in the mountain section of this state but in this instance the seam of coal owned or leased by appellant, known as the Upper Elkhorn seam, lies high on the mountain and the stripping process was adopted by appellant as the most feasible method of recovering the coal. The overburden of earth, rocks, roots and stumps of timber which had been cut off was removed by blasting, bulldozers and steam shovels and cast over the side of the mountain onto land owned by or under lease to appellant. The overburden was not stripped off the entire top of the mountain but in the particular operation here involved there was a stripping of the overburden about 60 feet wide around the southern or right hand side of the mountain from a point known as Weddington Gap on the westerly side of the mountain to a point on the eastern side of the mountain. The overburden from this strip was cast over on the Beaver Creek or southern side of the mountain and this strip is not directly involved in this case. Another strip of approximately the same width and length went around the northern or left side of the mountain and the overburden from this strip was cast over the Weddington Fork or northern side of the mountain, and it is this part of the overcasting that is here complained of. The two strips converged at a point near the eastern side of the mountain and from this point of convergence the two strips widened out and from here to the eastern side of the mountain the stripping was complete, that is the entire top of *Page 452 the mountain was removed, thus stripping all overburden on this eastern knob down to the coal seam. It is on this completely stripped knob on the eastern side of the mountain that the so-called lake or pond or basin was formed when the coal was lifted or excavated after the stripping was completed and it is from water which allegedly came from this lake or pond on the night of the flood that appellees attribute their loss and the destruction which hit the valley on the night in question. To complete the picture of the stripping operation, it needs to be said that the 60 foot stripping around the mountain and the stripping on the knob on the eastern side did not run out to the outcrop since this outcrop coal was of poor quality and not worth recovering. This left a berm on the outer side of the strip, and on the inner side of the strip was the 40 foot wall which constituted the unstripped top of the mountain and is referred to in this record as "the island."
Evidence for the appellant was that the mining operation carried on at the head of Weddington was carried on in the same manner as was customary at all strip mines on like terrain. Several persons working at the mine testified that the weep hole was opened on July 25 and was not closed prior to the flood. These workmen testified that they drove over the road in the pit on the night before the flood, some coming off the mountain as late as 4 a. m. on the day of the flood, and that there was no water in the pit other than ordinary rain water as would be found on any road. Some of the workmen described in detail the opening of the weep hole and stated that all the water ran out going down the valley and washing off a coal shed. Many persons living on Ferrells Creek, its tributaries, other creeks and their tributaries, testified that it rained almost all the night preceding the flood and that shortly after daybreak and just before the flood there was a very hard *Page 454 rain. The witnesses testified that this was the hardest rain they had ever seen. Conditions on the tributaries of Ferrels Creek, other than Weddington, and conditions on the other streams were described.
It was stated that the water coming out of Blue Pond branch tore up the branch, tore out some sled roads and paths and tore out some fence and moved logs and other things out of the hollow. Another witness testified that Blue Pond flooded lots of stuff but that no houses washed off.
According to the testimony of one witness, Middle Field Hollow was coming out large but the witness could make no comparison of the size of the water with that on other occasions. One gate thereon was completely covered with rock. No houses washed off, no trees or laps came out of the creek. Rock had washed out of Middle Field before but never as badly as on this occasion. Another witness testified that the water was coming out and rocks coming down when he was awakened about 1 a.m. and that after the hard rain near daybreak, water was knee deep on level ground where it had run off the hills.
A witness who returned to her home on Slick Rock about three days after the flood stated that Slick Rock had torn up more than ever before. Another witness stated that Slick Rock ran the biggest he had ever seen it; that he observed a few chunks and brush and limbs and that rocks were piled up at the mouth. He testified that up the hollow the road was torn some and that there were three or four little slides.
Honey Fork was stated to have been higher than it had ever been before. It rose and then fell and one witness who decided to leave his chicken coop found that the second rise had taken the coop. Honey Fork washed out some fence and rock walls; no houses were washed off the Fork and the witness did not see any logs but observed brush and stumps coming out of the Fork.
A witness living between Weddington and Road Forks testified that Road Forks was biggest he had ever seen it; that he lost some fence on Road as well as on Weddington. He stated that he lost a coal house on *Page 455 Weddington during the first rise and a wash house and toilet on the second rise. On cross examination this witness admitted that Road Fork did not wash like Weddington Fork did.
There was evidence that Brushy Fork split, the bigger part coming through the property near the mouth leaving rocks in the yard and garden and that the water flowed into Ferrells some distance down stream from its usual mouth. Witness living at the head of the right fork of Abner Fork testified that the water got up 3 feet on a rock wall but that she could not compare that with previous occasions. Another witness testified that it rained as hard as it had in 1935, that the creek got in his yard on both occasions but that it might have been an inch fuller this time. He stated that there were 25 to 35 houses on Abner and that none washed out but that a coal house or two was lost. The witness saw no stumps but saw one tree in the creek. Another witness stated that it was a big creek and that he had never seen as much damage up the forks on any other occasion. He stated that the hollows came out and brought logs to the mouth and piled them up; that the road was torn up pretty badly, that lots of fence was washed off, that a bridge or two was taken out, and that a barn partly washed away.
The creek that sustained the severest damage, other than Ferrells, was Beaver Creek which drained a watershed just south of Ferrells. Several witnesses stated that the rain which fell on Beaver was the hardest they had ever seen. The evidence was to the effect that Beaver rose, fell about 2 feet, and then after the severe rain came out high. The second rise brought houses and everything. Another witness stated that Beaver went wild; that the creek came out following the hard rain and washed away fences, completely took the road and cut into the highway at the mouth of the creek. Another witness described the large body of water at the mouth of Beaver and stated that one or two houses were floating in it, and that for the first three-fourths mile up the creek, 75% of the road was destroyed. He described a tremendous gorge of lumber behind an iron bridge on the creek. It was developed on cross examination that prior to the flood a railroad had been constructed up the creek thereby narrowing its channel and that strip *Page 456 mining was being carried on at the head of the creek and some of its tributaries.
A witness who lived on Card Creek, a watershed east of Ferrells, testified that the creek was higher than he ever remembered it being before. The county agricultural agent who made a survey of the damage of the flood testified that the highway at the mouth of Card Creek was almost cut in two. Another witness testified that two small houses and a bridge washed down Card Creek and lodged at the culvert. A witness who lived on Lick Creek which is north of Ferrells testified that it was a very hard rain; that some little bridges washed off; that the porch on his son-in-law's house was torn off; that laps and bushes were running in the creek and that the road was badly torn up. Another testified that some bridges came down, one of which got against his bridge and that the bridge was carried off. He stated that the bank was cut into and that logs tore fences loose and that a store building on the creek was torn apart. The witness stated that it was the largest water he had ever seen.
Kettle Camp Creek, south of Ferrells, according to the testimony of one witness, had a big run out with a lot of filth, trash and rocks and washed out some rock walls along the bank and damaged the road. On cross examination this witness stated that they had had a bigger creek since the flood and admitted that there are four or five truck mines on the creek and that much debris had been thrown in the stream. Another witness testified to substantially the same and told of a large log which blocked the culvert but on cross examination stated that the log had been put into the creek by the miners.
Evidence was also introduced comparing conditions on Grapevine Creek lying north of Ferrells. One witness stated that the creek damaged 1 1/2 acres of corn, and that while his bridge did not go out, the one above it did. The witness stated he found the bridge, some lumber and logs in his cornfield. Another stated that the creek rose about 6 feet and that it did much damage.
A map opposite page 2 of appellant's brief shows the location of these streams, some of which are considerable distance from Ferrells Creek. The judge announced *Page 457 that he was permitting the introduction of the evidence of conditions on these distant streams only to aid the jury in its, determination of conditions on Perrells Creek.
The other evidence introduced was the result of computations of the volume of water and the quantity of water at Ferrells Creek and some of its tributaries which appellant maintains demonstrates conclusively that it was a physical impossibility for the mining operation to have caused the flood. According to this testimony, if the pit contained 31/2 feet of water, its maximum height due to the berm, its velocity would have been but 110 cubic feet per second while the velocity at the mouth of Ferrells Creek was computed to be 6000 cubic feet per second, and would have been of but negligible effect. The hydraulic engineer computed the backwater at the mouth of Ferrells Creek to have been 1,700,000 cubic feet. While taking Rimmer's estimate of 500,000 gallons in the pit at the most, the comparable figure would have been 60,000 cubic feet in the pit or about thirty times as much in the backwater as in the pit.
Under these conditions it is difficult to believe that the small body of water on top of the mountain 3 1/2 miles away, even if it was filled to capacity and broke loose suddenly, could have been the cause of the damage to appellees' home.
After careful consideration of the entire record of eight volumes and over eleven hundred pages, we are forced to the conclusion that the loss sustained by appellees, great as it is, was brought about by the forces of nature over which man has no control and that it is not shown by the evidence that their loss was caused by negligence of appellant. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the lower court should have sustained appellant's motion for a directed verdict. It is not necessary to consider other grounds for reversal raised by appellant.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.