145 Iowa 485 | Iowa | 1909
The appellees are the town of Akron and its mayor and city council. Plaintiff is the owner of a large tract of bottom land lying south and west of' the limits of the town, and he claims that the town has so graded and guttered its streets as to collect and discharge the surface water falling upon the lots and lands within its limits on to plaintiff’s lands in a manner other and different from the way in which it passed off prior to the time the grading and guttering was done, to his great damage. The defendant denies that it has collected or is discharging the surfacé water from its natural course; that, in any event, it had the right to grade its streets and turn surface water from its natural course; that it was guilty of no negligence in improving, guttering, and grading its streets; that it had the right to fight surface water, treating it as a common enemy; that whatever damage plaintiff has suffered was due to extraordinary floods; • and that in-no event is the town liable, for the reason that it was given full power to grade and gutter its streets.
Plaintiff’s land is considerably lower than the land within the corporate limits of the town, and must, of course, bear its proper servitude. But it is not true, as counsel contend, that the town had the right to collect surface water originally flowing in another ’direction ' and -to discharge the same upon plaintiff’s land, or in such a manner as that it caused an overflow of plaintiff’s land, to his damage.
its relations to land owners outside the town limits, the town had no greater rights than any citizen or private corporation. In grading and guttering its streets, it, so far as outsiders were concerned, acted in a proprietary capacity, and not as an instrumentality of government, and nowhere in our statutes is it given the right to collect and discharge surface water upon an adjoining property in a manner different from the way in which nature' intended or provided. Noonan v. City of Albany, 79 N. Y. 470 (35 Am. Rep. 540). In this case Andrews, J"., speaking for the court, said: “A municipal corporation has no greater right than an individual to collect the surface water from its lands or streets into an artificial channel, and discharge it upon the lands of another, nor has it any immunity from legal responsibility for creating or maintaining nuisances. Wett v. Village of Brockport, 16 N. Y. 172, note; Byrnes v. City of Cohoes, 67 N. Y. 204; Haskell v. City of New Bedford, 108 Mass. 208; Attorney-General v. Leeds Corporation, L. R., 5 Ch. App. 583.” See, also, Eastman v. Meredith, 36 N. H. 285 (72 Am. Dec. 302) ; Maxmilian v. New York, 62 N. Y. 160 (20 Am. Rep. 468); Oliver v. Worcester, 102 Mass. 489 (3 Am. Rep. 485); O’Brien v. City, 25 Minn. 331 (33 Am. Rep. 470).
Assuming, then, that the defendant town occupies no different relation to plaintiff than if it had been a private corporation or an individual, we look to the law of this state with reference to the discharge and diversion of surface waters. We have adopted what is known as the civil law rule in the leading case of Livingston v. McDonald, 21 Iowa, 160. The substance of that rule is that the owner of higher land has no right even in the course of the
Now the evidence shows, without substantial dispute, that, before the town graded and guttered its streets, there was a natural watershed running from near the southeast corner of town to the northwest corner; that the water east and south of this watershed ran through a depression or “swale” north and west to near the northwest corner of the town, where it emptied into the Big Sioux Biver a short distance from the railway track of the defendant railway company. It also appears withoiit serious dispute that, when the defendant graded and guttered its streets, it cut through this watershed, and caused water which fell upon the east part of the town and which came down from the hills to the east, which, had it followed its natural course, would have gone north and west into the Big Sioux Biver, to flow east until it struck the embankment of the railway company running west of south, whence it ran along and in places over the embankment, and many times during the past five years flooded plaintiff’s land, to his damage. There can be no doubt whatever that defendant caused water to run from the east-along what are known as Main, Iowa, and Sargent Streets, westward and down onto plaintiff’s land, which did not originally go in that direction; but which went north and west and into the Big Sioux Biver. Defendant’s own surveys, blueprints, and profiles
Appellees contend, however, that, as they were not negligent in improving the streets, no recovery can be had. As the action is not bottomed upon negligence, this contention is without merit.
Again, it is asserted that there is no showing as to how' much of plaintiff’s damage was due to the diversion of the surface water by defendant, and how much to the overflow of a ditch on the south side of the town. It is true, perhaps, that the testimony as to this point is not definite, but, as it appears without serious conflict that the gutters and ditches increased the flow on plaintiff’s land, defendant is responsible for its share of that increase, and the difficulty in arriving at its exact proportion of the damage is no reason for defeating plaintiff’s action. Defendant is responsible for the damage it did, no matter what other causes contributed to the result.
The main proposition relied upon by appellee, however, is one of law, and this is, as applied to this case that th'e ordinary rules as to surface water do not obtain. We have seen that this is a misapprehension, and that the case is