53 Minn. 259 | Minn. | 1893
The defendant constructed its road, running from east to west, across block 2, in the village of Utica, in this state. For the purpose of laying its track, it raised an embankment across the block, taking the earth from along each side, thus making on each side what is called a “borrow pit.” The two pits were connected by a culvert through the embankment. .On the north side the surface of the ground slopes for a considerable distance towards this part of the embankment from the north and northeast and northwest, so that the surface waters from rains and melting snows flow towards that part of the embankment, and before it was there, flowed over the lands to the south and east. The effect of the embankment was to stop the flow of surface water in a diffused manner over the surface of the ground to the south; to gather it into the north borrow pit, from which it flowed through the culvert to that on the south side, and from that, at its lower or easterly end, it flowed in a stream upon plaintiff’s lot in the same block. It is to be assumed, for the purpose of the point involved, that the presence of the embankment, culvert, and borrow pits was the cause of the water flowing in a stream on plaintiff’s land, and that no such quantity of surface water would have reached his land but for their existence.
No question is made of the defendant’s right to make the embankment, culvert, and borrow pits, nor is it claimed that they were not necessary to the construction of the railroad in the usual
The case was, in effect, left to the jury, upon the proposition (upon which respondent’s counsel squarely present their case here) that if the embankment, culvert, and borrow pits, though carefully made, and necessary to the construction and operation of the road, caused the surface waters to accumulate and flow in a stream, as they would not have done had not the natural surface of the ground been disturbed, upon plaintiff’s land, doing damage, the defendant is liable.
The question of the rights of landowners, in respect to surface waters has, in one form or another, been many times before this court. From the memorandum of the learned judge who tried the cause, it is apparent that he misapprehended to some extent the decisions of this court on the subject. We are not surprised that he did so, for in some of the opinions are expressions which, disconnected from the facts of the cases in which they were written, would point to the conclusion at which he arrived. This makes it proper to analyze most of those decisions.
The civil-law doctrine of servitudes in respect to surface waters has never been admitted in this state. Nor has the common-law rule been admitted, in the rigorous form in which it has been expressed by some text writers and decisions. Surface water has been styled a common enemy, which every landowner may get rid of as best he can, and every owner must guard against as best he may. We have held-that each owner’s absolute liberty in respect to such waters must be modified by the maxim that each must so enjoy his own as not unnecessarily to injure another’s.
In O’Brien v. City of St. Paul, 25 Minn. 331, an attempt was made to state the rule on the subject thus: “An owner may improve his land for the purpose for which such land is ordinarily used, and may do what is necessary for that purpose. He may build upon it, or raise or lower its surface, even though the effect may be to prevent surface water which before flowed upon it from coming upon it, or to draw from adjoining land surface water which would otherwise remain there, or to shed surface water over land on which it would not otherwise go.” Any more restricted rule
From this review of the cases, it is apparent that the Jordan Case is the only one before this cburt in which was distinctly presented for decision the point involved in the proposition upon which the trial court left this case to the jury. For the sake of precision, we will restate the question: When an owner improves-his land for the purpose for which such land is ordinarily used,, doing only what is necessary for that purpose, and being guilty of no negligence in the manner of doing it, is he liable because,, as an incident of so improving, surface waters accumulate and. flow in a stream upon the lands of others? A doubt upon this was suggested in the O’Brien Case. But on more mature consideration we are of opinion that the owner so improving is not liable.. The rule stated in that case has frequently been quoted in other cases in this court, and its correctness has never been questioned; ’and, but for the doubt suggested in that case, we do not think it would have been questioned that a case like this comes within, it. One’s land may be incidentally, even seriously, injured in value- and usefulness by the proper improvement of adjacent land, withdrawing from it surface waters, the presence of which may improve its fertility and value, or shedding upon it surface waters, which would not otherwise go there, and drowning it, or otherwise impairing its value, or causing such waters to remain upon it, although their presence may render it comparatively valueless,, and no action will lie. When the injury is incidental to the proper improvement of adjacent land, it is impossible to see that the manner in which such improvement operates to cause the-injury — whether by drawing off the waters, or setting them back so that they cannot flow off, or causing them to run either in a diffused manner or in streams — can make any difference with the liability. If a man’s land be injured to the extent of $500> by surface water coming upon it, it would seem illogical and unreasonable that he may recover if it comes in streams, but cannot recover if it come in a diffused manner. The test of liability must be, is the injury incidental to another man doing-on his own land what he has a right to do, i. e. improve it for-
Order reversed.
(Opinion published 55 N. W. Rep. 133.)