84 S.E. 290 | N.C. | 1915
This is an action for damages for diverting surface water from the right of way of the defendant and ponding it back upon the plaintiff. The defendant in building its roadbed in 1881 passed through several thousand acres of low, boggy, and uncleared land, a portion of which formed a basin in which all water falling on this area and surrounding lands accumulated and stood until it passed off by percolation or evaporation. The defendant, in order to maintain its roadbed through this basin, found it necessary to drain somewhere, and for that purpose cut two 6-foot lateral ditches along its right of way, and then, in order that the water on the eastern side might be carried through to the western side, it put a culvert under its roadbed whereby the water which would have drained east if at all was carried to the western side. To let it out of this basin the defendant secured the use of an old ditch known as the "Terry" ditch, and, cutting a connecting ditch 125 yards from its right of way through the rim of the basin, drained the diverted water down the "Terry" ditch some 800 yards to the county road ditch, and thence along the road 180 yards to where the ditch crossed the county road through a culvert. In 1911 the defendant enlarged these ditches from their right of way to the county road and along the county road to an 8-foot ditch, but left the culvert at the county road not enlarged, and did not extend the ditch beyond the county road.
The motion to nonsuit was properly denied. The principle is well settled that an upper proprietor can increase and accelerate the flow of water from his land, but such flow of water must not be diverted to the detriment of the lower proprietor. Briscoe v. Parker,
"The defendant has no right to collect surface water into a ditch not adequate to receive it and thus flood and injure the lands of another." *337 Staton v. R. R.,
In Brown v. R. R.,
This cause of action did not accrue till 1911, when the enlargement of the ditch and the defendant's failure to lengthen and enlarge the same at the mouth caused the flooding. No damage had accrued to plaintiff till that time and no action could have been maintained. The injury was not caused by the ditches dug in 1881, but by the deepening and enlarging of them in 1911, whereby the additional water was carried down and was stopped by the failure to enlarge the culvert at the public road and to carry the ditch farther on. It is true, the ditches dug in 1881 diverted the water, but it was carried by the plaintiff's land, and the exit being sufficient the water was not ponded back on him and he suffered no damage. The statute of limitations began to run, therefore, only with the enlargement of the ditches in 1911 and the overflow then caused by the insufficient exit afforded by the culvert. Roberts v. Baldwin,
The diversion of the water began in 1881, but, having caused no damage to plaintiff, he could not bring an action for damages. If the acceleration in 1911 was of a natural flow, this would not give a ground of action, but it is the acceleration of diverted water which caused the damage.
The plaintiff is entitled to recover such damages as accrued within three years prior to the commencement of this action, or he could recover permanent damages in an action brought therefor within five years after the enlargement of the ditch and the ponding back of the diverted water by the insufficient culvert, unless by acquiescence for twenty years the presumption of a grant or easement had arisen. Roberts v. Baldwin,
The lower proprietor is not required to avoid damages to his land in such case by digging ditches to carry off surface water wrongfully *338
diverted from its natural flow by the upper proprietor to his damage.Roberts v. Baldwin,
No error.
Cited: Caldwell v. R. R.,
(271)