Bonthuis v. Great Northern Railway Co.

89 Wash. 442 | Wash. | 1916

Bausman, J.

Defendant’s railway goes through plaintiffs’ land parallel to Crab creek. When floods raise the water to a certain old bed which is dry most of the year, the creek flows through this also, rejoining the main stream in a loop crossed by the tracks upon two trestles. The trestle at the upper or receiving mouth of this dry bed being washed away by a flood in 1909, the company rebuilt it with a broader span. In 1910, there was another flood, and this did much mischief within the loop to the land of plaintiffs, who' lay it to the widening of the span and also to some clearing done by defendant.

Now the unruly stream not only overflows at every flood the entire neighborhood, but it damaged this land in 1909 through the same bed and trestle. Two things are plain: not only had plaintiffs’ land been flooded through this bed *443before the building of the railway, but it was not saved by the railway embankment in 1909. So far, then, as the grievance is the rebuilding of this trestle with its wider span, we have here no deflecting of surface waters, but only a going back to original exposure.

Plaintiffs contend that, at least, in clearing its right of way farther up, the company damaged them, because the clearing let the flood down too rapidly into the dry bed. It seems that, after the flood of 1909 and before this of 1910, the company cut down much growth of saplings and bushes along the main creek above the intake of the dry bed, and plaintiffs say that the debris was negligently allowed to float down, dam the main creek opposite the intake, and aggravate the inflow during the flood.

Here is a possible grievance in law were it one in fact, but the grievance is ill-proved. To begin with, the worst thing the company could do as to itself, after its experience in 1909, was to dam the creek at this point. It is consequently improbable, and should be clearly proved. Its workmen testified not only that no such dam accumulated, but that the saplings and bushes had been burned as they cut them. As for plaintiffs’ witnesses, they are on this point exceedingly vague. The dam they describe is composed of such debris as is common after riot and overflow in any waters, and does not resemble the growth that was cut. But more, they do not say that they actually saw any dam during the flood. What they assert is that they saw this debris stretched across the main channel after the waters went out.

Plaintiffs have not assisted the court by brief or argument, and we can find nothing to sustain their judgment, so defendant’s challenge to the evidence should have been sustained. Without deciding, if it were possible to pronounce a general rule, what constitutes an unfair manner of turning surface waters off one’s own land to a neighbor’s, it is clear that there has been no unfairness shown here. The burden in this respect was on plaintiffs, for the company has a pri*444mary right, under familiar decisions of this court, to hurry the outflow of surface waters from its property. Cass v. Dicks, 14 Wash. 75, 44 Pac. 113, 53 Am. St. 859; Harvey v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 63 Wash. 669, 116 Pac. 464.

Let the case be remanded and the action dismissed.

All concur.