236 P. 847 | Mont. | 1925
The court below held that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and in the argument respondent confidently referred the court to the following decisions of this court: Fleming v. Lockwood,
The supreme court of Oregon, in Mallett v. Taylor,
We must resolve the question presented in this litigation with reference to those ancient rules of law which had reason, experience and necessities of society for their foundation. This action falls into that class of cases known as "trespass on the case," and involves the question of negligence. *554 In fact, negligence is the very gist of the action.
Since negligence is the very essence of this action, plaintiffs must allege sufficient facts to show that the defendants were guilty of negligence either in the construction of their ditch or in the management and control of the same after they began to use it. (See Hopkins v. Boston M.C. Co.,
The only question presented is: Does the complaint state a[1] cause of action upon any theory? For if it does, it is proof against a general demurrer. (Donovan v. McDevitt,
It is the rule in this state that the owner of an irrigating[2] ditch is not an insurer thereof and is liable only for damages caused by his willful acts or by his negligence in constructing, maintaining or using his ditch. (Fleming v.Lockwood,
From the very lengthy pleading the following statements[3, 4] material to our present inquiry may be gathered: For many years the plaintiffs have been in possession of a ranch in Deer Lodge county which is arid in character, but with artificial irrigation produced profitable agricultural crops. In 1901 they made an appropriation of waters of Fish Trap Creek and by means of a ditch then constructed by them, conveyed the waters to and upon their lands in quantities sufficient to irrigate the same, and this ditch was kept in repair and served the plaintiffs' needs until it was destroyed.
The lands of the defendants lie in the same general neighborhood as the plaintiffs' lands and they too require irrigation for their successful cultivation. In 1917 defendants appropriated water from Fish Trap Creek and commenced the construction of a ditch, which was completed in 1919. *556 Defendants' ditch is referred to in the record as the "Grupe Ditch."
Both ditches take water from the southern bank of the stream and for a considerable distance are parallel and only about 100 feet apart. The defendants' ditch taps the creek at a point above the head of plaintiffs' ditch and for some 1,500 feet is at an elevation higher than the plaintiffs' ditch. Defendants constructed their ditch along this stretch of 1,500 feet through loose dirt, sand, gravel and other porous formations, without employing any means to prevent the water escaping, with the result that much of the water turned into the ditch seeped from it and saturated the ground between the two ditches, causing earth, boulders and other debris to slip and slide into plaintiffs' ditch. Thereupon plaintiffs notified defendants of the seepage and the damage which would result from maintaining and using the ditch in its then condition, but in disregard of their duty defendants in 1922 enlarged their ditch to double its former capacity and continued to try to flow water through it to the full extent of its enlarged capacity, with full knowledge of the facts and without making any effort by fluming, piping or otherwise to prevent the seepage.
In June, 1923, in the midst of the irrigating season and when plaintiffs were greatly in need of the water, the ground between the two ditches became so saturated with the water seeping from defendants' ditch as to cause trees, rocks and earth to slip and slide from their natural positions and to fall into and fill plaintiffs' ditch, and break and destroy the banks for a great distance, and defendants continued so to use their ditch during the season and to permit the water to escape therefrom and saturate the ground above and about plaintiffs' ditch that plaintiffs were unable to repair it and their crops were burned and destroyed, to their damage, etc. *557
It is then alleged "that the acts and conduct of defendants in flowing water through said ditch in the irrigation season of 1922 and in the irrigation season of 1923, after the enlargement of said ditch, without having flumed, piped or otherwise provided against the seeping and percolation of said water from said Grupe Ditch at the point herein alleged, and for the distance herein alleged, constituted, and was, and is negligent acts and conduct on the part of the defendants, and acts and conduct by them in violation of their duty to plaintiffs herein alleged, and that said acts and conduct of defendants directly and proximately caused the damages and injury to plaintiffs herein alleged."
It is alleged further that their ditch referred to is the only means by which plaintiffs may irrigate their lands; that for eighteen years prior to the completion of the Grupe Ditch they had used their ditch continuously without trouble from washing, or from the ground slipping or sliding into it, and that the defendants knew that by maintaining and using the Grupe Ditch in the manner indicated, plaintiffs' ditch would be damaged and rendered unfit for use, but, notwithstanding, they carelessly and negligently kept water in the Grupe Ditch and continued to use the same in the manner stated.
It is the rule in this state that in the maintenance and use of his ditch the ditch owner is bound to exercise that degree of care which prudent and careful men ordinarily exercise under like circumstances where the risk is their own, and if he fails to do so he is liable for injuries which the water from his ditch causes to adjoining property in consequence of his failure. (Fleming v. Lockwood, above.) Bearing in mind this rule and the following facts pleaded and admitted to be true by the demurrer, viz.: Along the stretch of 1,500 feet defendants' ditch is at a higher elevation than plaintiffs' ditch and only a short distance therefrom; that it was constructed through loose earth, sand, *558 gravel and other porous materials which would not confine the water within the ditch; that defendants had actual notice that the water escaped from their ditch and caused injury to plaintiffs' ditch, — the question then recurs: Was it negligence on the part of the defendants to enlarge their ditch to double its former capacity and to then maintain and use it to the full extent of its enlarged capacity without making any effort to prevent the water seeping from it?
The rule which measures the duty of one person to another in cases of this character is expressed in the ancient maxim, "Sicutere tuo ut alienum non laedas," translated in our Code: "One must so use his own rights as not to infringe upon the rights of another." (Sec. 8743, Rev. Codes 1921.) The doctrine of the maxim is not inconsistent, however, with the rule which permits a person to use his property as he pleases for all purposes for which it is adaptable, if he exercises due care and caution to prevent injury to another. (Fleming v. Lockwood, above.)
While it will be conceded at once that defendants had the right to construct and use their ditch for the irrigation of their lands, provided they used due care and caution to prevent injury to others entitled to equal rights, still no matter how great benefit may be derived from their enterprise, the law does not countenance the principle that one tract of land may be reclaimed at the expense of the destruction of another without compensation.
But further discussion of general principles is unnecessary. The authorities are quite uniform in holding that the ditch owner who constructs his ditch through soil naturally incapable of holding water, is bound to exert reasonable efforts to prevent seepage and his failure to do so constitutes negligence. The rule is stated in very general terms in 15 R.C.L. 490, as follows: "Constructing an irrigation ditch through sand banks, and forming the bottom by sand *559
and gravel loosely scraped together and permitting such condition to continue after notice of its insufficiency, by reason of which the water seeps through the bottom to the injury of adjoining land, is negligence." (Howell v. Big Horn Basin ColonizationCo.,
It is our conclusion that the complaint states a cause of action for negligence in the maintenance and use of defendants' ditch; hence it was proof against the general demurrer.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to overrule the demurrer.
Reversed and remanded.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, STARK and MATTHEWS concur.
HONORABLE A.J. HORSKY, District Judge, sitting in place of MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY, absent on account of illness, dissents. *560