91 Mo. App. 660 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
— Plaintiff is the owner of the southeast quarter of section twenty-one and of the northeast quarter of section twenty-eight, township sixty-four, range six west, situated in Clark county. The defendant is the owner of the
The plaintiff inherited her land from her father, Charles Henshaw. Defendant has been the owner of and in possession of bis tract for the past twelve or fifteen years. A stream flowing a short distance in a natural channel known as Sugar creek originally ran hear the northeast corner of defendant’s land, then in a southeast direction over plaintiff’s land into lowlands of plaintiff where it ceased to have a defined channel and the waters from it spread out over the lowlands and continued on in a southeasterly direction, finally flowing into Honey creek.
Twenty or twenty-five years before defendant purchased his land a ditch had been constructed along the north line of his tract emptying into Sugar creek near the northeast corner of his land. This ditch received the surface water coming from the north and conveyed it into Sugar creek except in-times of large freshets when the creek would back up and cause the waters in the ditch to overflow. Twelve or fifteen years before the trial and while Henshaw owned plaintiff’s land, he changed the course of Sugar creek by digging a ditch along the east line of defendant’s land and past the southeast' corner thereof. According to the evidence, the effect of tire change in the channel of Sugar creek was to decrease its fall and to cause the waters in it to back up and to eventually fill up the ditch on the north of defendant’s land for something near a quarter of a mile back from its mouth. The evidence shows that after it filled up it had been cleaned out and that it again filled up from sediment deposited by backwater out of Sugar creek and had been in this condition for eight or ten years.
Tbe petition is in equity and asks that defendant be enjoined from maintaining bis dam across tbe north ditch and that be be compelled to keep said ditcb open so that tbe water coming from the north may be gathered by said ditcb and emptied into Sugar creek.
The court on its own motion called a jury and submitted to it tbe following questions:
“1. Before and at tbe time defendant dammed or. put levee across tbe ditcb running on south side of road and entering into Sugar creek, was tbe east end of said ditch filled up so water would not flow and pass through same into' said Sugar creek ?
“2. Before, and at the time defendant dammed or leveed
“3. Did and does the damming of the Sugar creek ditch by defendant, cause water to be turned upon plaintiff’s lands to the injury of same that would have passed on to Sugar creek, had the dam not have been put in ?
“4. Did defendant cut a ditch, or cause the same to be done, leading from the ditch running east along the road into Sugar creek, leading south from said ditch, discharging the waters of same upon the lands of the plaintiff, that would not have been so discharged had the dam not have been put in the ditch leading into Sugar creek, to the injury of said lands of the defendant?
“5. Did the defendant dam the ditch leading into Sugar creek and cut a ditch connected therewith, above said dam, and thus turn the water of said ditch leading into defendant’s lands that would have passed into said Sugar creek, through said ditch, had the dam not have been put in, to the injury of said lands of plaintiff?”
To which the jury returned the following answers:
“No. 1. Yes.
“No. 2. Yes.
“No. 3. No.
“No. 4. No.
“No. 5. No.”
The court adopted the finding of the jury and found the issues for the defendant and rendered judgment accordingly.
After an unsuccessful motion for a new trial plaintiff appealed.
According to the finding of the jury and the trial court, and according to the preponderance of the evidence, as it seems to us, the removal of the dam across the north ditch would not afford the plaintiff the protection she desires, to-wit, to cause the water of which she complains to flow from
The judgment is for the right party and should be affirmed.