The Department of Highways has appealed from a judgment of $7,500 based on a jury’s verdict in favor of the plaintiff, H. L. Ashby, for damages to his land and crops. Plaintiff’s case is predicated upon *672 the charge the Highway Department constructed a fill across his property without providing sufficient outlets for the drainage of the watershed above the fill. It is also alleged that such drainage outlets as were provided were permitted to become obstructed with debris and vegetation. Plaintiff also prayed for a mandatory injunction to require the Department to repair the fill so as to provide for proper drainage. The court on motion of the Department required him to elect between his action for damages and his request for injunctive relief. He elected to rely on his right to damages.
Plaintiff admits the rule that the state ordinarily is exempt from liability for the negligence of its agents. Constitution of Kentucky, section 231; Hunt-Forbes Construction Co. v. Robinson,
The first case which expressly permitted recovery against the state for a trespass amounting to a taking of property seems to be Lehman v. Williams, 1946,
Counsel for the Department vigorously insist that these cases are wrong and should be overruled.
Consideration of the cases, especially those based on negligence of the Commonwealth’s agents, leaves us with grave doubt as to their soundness. We note that in Lehman v. Williams,
We do not consider it necessary at the time either to approve or disapprove the cases which have permitted recovery against the Commonwealth for trespass to land. Recovery was permitted in those cases only on the theory that when the acts of the state constituted a taking of property, the law would imply an agreement to pay for it. In the cases where negligence was involved recovery has been permitted on the theory that the injured party could waive the tort and sue on an implied prom *673 ise to pay. This is nothing more than a; legal fiction, of course, but the fiction has been permitted in order that the landowner ' might receive compensation for his property without the delay necessary to obtain specific legislative approval to sue. But even under this theory a landowner, by availing himself of the fiction of an implied promise to pay, necessarily subjects himself to the rules of practice and procedure incidental to the enforcement of such right. Among these rules is the statute of limitations which on an implied promise to pay is five years, KRS 413.120.
Here the fill which plaintiff complains of was built in 1927. The actual basis for his claim is the charge that sufficient outlets were not placed in the fill to provide adequate drainage of his land. Although there is an allegation and some slight proof that the situation was aggravated when the Department permitted the outlets to become obstructed, the damage caused by poor maintenance is incidental and comparatively minor. It is clear that plaintiff’s cause of action, if he has any, arose some 25 years ago and the five-year statute of limitation on an implied promise to pay for the damage has long since expired.'
Plaintiff attempts to avoid the application of the statute of limitations by invoking the rule that where a structure, although permanent, is negligently constructed the damages are recurrent and suits for recovery may be brought at intervals so long as the condition exists. Madionsville-Hartford & Eastern Railroad Co. v. Graham,
Since the plaintiff’s petition disclosed that his cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations, the general demurrer to the petition should have been sustained. Even in the absence of a demurrer, since the statute of limitations was properly pleaded by the Department, it was entitled to a peremptory instruction at the close of plaintiff’s evidence.
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
