48 Mo. App. 398 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
This is a suit to recover damages for the overflow of the plaintiff’s lands caused by the backing up of surface water from the defendant’s roadbed. The petition contained two counts. The first count charged that defendant in the building and improving of said railroad so negligently built the embankment of earth (on which their cars run), and so high without any waterways, sluices, ditches or other means of escape for water, that said roadbed' forms a dam for a long distance southwest of plaintiff’s said land, so that by reason thereof whenever it rains in considerable and
The other count was based upon section 2614, Revised Statutes.
A demurrer was sustained to the evidence under the first count, and the case went to the jury under the evidence and instructions on the second count. The verdict and judgment were for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.
I. The plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence adduced in support of the first count of the petition. There was not a scintilla of evidence tendingin the remotest degree to show that the defendant was guilty of negligence in the construction of its roadbed ; consequently, under the well-settled law of this state, the injury thereby done to the plaintiff ’ s lands must be considered as the natural and necessary consequence of what the defendant had the right to do under its charter, and the damage was damnum absqtce injuria. Clark v. Railroad, 36 Mo. 224; Jones v. Railroad, 84 Mo. 151; Abbolt v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 271; Moss v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 86.
There was no error is sustaining the defendant’s demurrer. The defendant had the right to construct on its right of way, except where intersected by natural waterways, a solid and continuous roadbed for its track. No one had a right to have the surface water flow across its right of way, but on the contrary it had a perfect
In Pettigrew v. Evansville, 23 Wis. 236, which has been cited by us with approval in Schneider v. Railroad, 29 Mo. App. 68, it was said, “if the proprietor in obstructing the flow or turning away the water which comes from the land of another, changes its direction, as in general he must, and it then runs off upon the land of a third person where before it would not run, and causes damages, no action will lie in favor of such third person for the injury. As to such third person it is damnum absque injuria, because the proprietor who obstructs the flow and gives the water a new direction is acting in pursuance of a strict legal right.” And this would be no infringement of the maxim, sic utere tuo ut alienum non Icedas. These principles have been invoked and applied in several cases in this state like the present. Field v. Railroad, 21 Mo. App. 600; Schneider v. Railroad, 29 Mo. App., supra; Burke v. Railroad, 29 Mo. App. 370; Abbott v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 286; Jones v. Railroad, 84 Mo. 151; Moss v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 86.
II. The statute, section 2614, does not require the construction of ditches or drains by a railroad company along each side of its roadbed, except for the purpose of connecting the same with “ditches or drains, or water courses so as to afford sufficient outlet to drain and carry off the water along such railroad, whenever the
The judgment must, therefore, be affirmed.