102 So. 259 | Miss. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee sued the appellant for damages resulting from the overflow of his lands from the drainage system of appellant because of the cleaning out of channels of the canals, or certain of them, which caused the waters thereof to back and impound upon the lands of plaintiff destroying his crops.
There were two counts in the declaration. The first proceeded upon the theory that the work was done in an improper manner, and that it could have been done in a manner whereby plaintiff’s lands would not have been overflowed or damaged. There was a demurrer to this count of the declaration which was sustained by the court below, and from which no appeal has been taken. The second count of the declaration proceeded upon the theory that the work was performed in a proper and necessary manner, but that plaintiff’s lands did not touch upon the said canals, and he had not had an opportunity to present any claims for damages until the present injury occurred, and that his right to damages is assured to him by section 17 of the Constitution, providing that private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without compensation, etc.
There was a demurrer to this count of the declaration which was overruled, and thereupon a plea was filed by the defendant, denying that it was guilty, etc., in the manner, etc., set forth in the declaration, and notice under the general issue was given that defendant is a public corporation not liable for damages except in the
The appellant contends that the damages here involved were within the contemplation of the original laying out of the district, and that they must have been claimed at that time, or be precluded by the creation of the district at that time, relying upon Moore v. Swamp Dredging Co., 125 Miss. 842, 88 So. 522, and Minyard v. Pelucia Drainage District, 133 Miss. 847, 98 So. 225. The appellee contends that because the Moore case, supra, was a grant of a right of way and touched upon the canals, that it is different from the present case where the lands damaged lie some distance away from the canals. The present canals which were being dredged out were laid out in accordance with the original plans of the district when created.
It is not a case of constructing new and independent drains not within the contemplation of the plans and specifications in the original creation of the district. In other words, the canals here involved are the canals
It is true that it is difficult to determine how often it may be necessary to redredge these canals, or at what season of the year the work may be required to be done to protect the district in the drainage contemplated. It is all a matter of engineering and calculation, and where no changes are made in the district all damages are fixed at the time of the creation of the district, or during its progress. Of course, if new drainag’e schemes not with
Under the record now before us the damages were within the contemplation of the original laying out of the district. The judgment must be reversed, because of the failure to grant the peremptory instruction requested by the defendant.
Reversed and. dismissed.