48 Neb. 87 | Neb. | 1896
The appellant brought this action against the defendants, who are the county commissioners of Johnson county and the overseer of a road district therein, to restrain the defendants from building a certain culvert across a highway, and from otherwise changing the natural course of surface water. There was a general finding for the defendants, and a judgment of dismissal. The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of certain described land, and that along the west border thereof lies a public highway; that the defendants raised an embankment along said highway in such a manner as to change the course of surface water accumulating on the land west of the highway, so as to cause it to flow upon the lands of the plaintiff; whereas, before the embankment was constructed, such water flowed over the lands north of plaintiff’s. The petition further
It appears that the highway in question has long been a public road, and that several years before the action was brought a fill was made of two or three feet along the highway to the west of plaintiffs land, for the purpose of improving the road. This is the embankment complained of. Its effect in diverting surface water we cannot understand from the written record, for the reason that the witnesses refer continually to certain maps in evidence, evidently accompanying their words with indications and gestures referring to maps and points thereon, but not in such a manner that they can be followed without the aid of these indications and gestures. As to this feature of the case, however, this defect in the record is not important, because we are satisfied that the petition does not in this respect state a cause of action. It is not alleged that the embankment was not a necessary or a proper improvement of the highway. It is not alleged that there was any negligence in the design or manner of its construction. It is not even alleged that the effect of the embankment is to accumulate surface water upon other lands and discharge it in a body on the lands of the plaintiff. It is merely alleged that the embankment has diverted the natural flow of surface water so as to turn it over plaintiff’s lands. On this state of facts the rule established in Morrissey v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 38 Neb., 406, is directly applicable, and a reference to that case avoids the necessity of further discussion.
The latter part of the petition, charging the purpose to construct a culvert which will discharge accumulated surface waters in a body on plaintiff’s lands, presents a somewhat different question. The evidence tends to show that a creek flows through the south part of plaintiff’s land. The natural surface of the land rises from
Judgment aepirmed.