| Neb. | Oct 15, 1878

Lake, J.

The only question in this case is whether the facts stated in the petition constitute a cause of action, the judgment sought being a mandatory injunction to abate what is claimed to be a private nuisance.

The plaintiff, as the petition shows, is the owner in fee and occupier of the north half of the north-east quarter, and the defendant of the north half of the north-west quarter, of sec. 14, town 18, range 7, in *45Dodge county. On the defendant’s land there is a natural pond covering about'five acres, which is the reservoir for the surface water from one hundred acres of low land surrounding it. Before the wrong complained of, there was no outlet to this pond, and the water accumulating therein was carried away only by evaporation and percolation.

As matter of complaint it is alleged: “That on or about the fifteenth day of June, 1877, the defendant dug a ditch from said pond across the land so owned by bim to the land so as aforesaid owned by the plaintiff, which said ditch drains all the water from said pond into the land of plaintiff.” * * * *

“ That by reason of the same the said water drained from said pond through said, ditch spreads over and into several acres of plaintiff’s cultivated land and renders the same not cultivatable and unfit for use.”

It is further alleged that the water so thrown upon plaintiff’s land has commenced ■ to cut a water-course diagonally across it for the distance of about fifty rods, and that the natural result from said ditch “ is to cause all the water accumulating in said pond after each rain, and in the spring season, to flow over, into, and across the said land of plaintiff, thereby rendering the same wholly unfit for tillage, and to cut said water-course across plaintiff’s land of greater depth and width each time said pond is drained.”

It is not questioned by the defendant that these facts are ample to entitle the plaintiff to a judgment for damages. But it is contended that they are not sufficient to establish the existence of a private nuisance abatable by the mandatory process of the court. In support of this position it is urged, 1st, that “ the injury complained of is complete and fully accomplished,” and, 2d, that the plaintiff “ has a full and adequate remedy at law,” either of which being establish*46ed, it would follow that the demurrer was rightly sustained.

But we are of the opinion that neither of these objections should prevail. They imply for the language quoted from the petition a meaning much too circumscribed. Fairly construed, the petition certainly shows an incomplete, continuing injury to the rights of the plaintiff as owner in fee of the land flooded by the water from the defendant’s ditch. One specific and seemingly well grounded charge of future and continuing injury, is that which shows a tendency in the water to cut for itself a channel some fifty rods in length across the plaintiff’s land, and which must necessarily become deeper and wider with each succeeding flow of water. The full extent of the actual future damages, depending, as they must, upon so many contingencies, are not susceptible of an accurate present estimation. During a year of drouth they would be only nominal, while in one of numerous and excessive rain-falls they might be very great.

Now it is certain that the plaintiff has the absolute right to occupy and use his land for such lawful purpose as he sees fit, unencumbered by the periodical floodings complained of. And this is' one of those substantial rights incident to the property itself, to protect which, an injunction will always be granted. The ordinary remedy by an action, or a succession of actions, for the recovery of damages, would be wholly inadequate to afford that complete redress for the injuries complained of, to which the plaintiff is entitled. A correct test for determining whether an injunction is the appropriate remedy was given, we think, by the supreme court of Wisconsin, in Pettigrew v. Evansville, 25 Wis., 223" court="Wis." date_filed="1870-01-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/pettigrew-v-village-of-evansville-6600340?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6600340">25 Wis., 223, wherein the threatened nuisance was essentially the same as that committed by the defendant here. After having held that the petition stated a case *47suitable for equitable cognizance, and on a motion for a rehearing, in which it was urged that- the proceeding by injunction could not be upheld, the court, by Dixon, Ch. J., said: “ This depends altogether upon the nature of the injury. If it be permanent, or such as will continue to operate in all future time, then the proceeding can be sustained; but if it be only temporary, or such as will cease when the waters of the pond are once drawn off, then it cannot.” And a rehearing was denied. Applying that test to, the facts of the case now under consideration, there can be no doubt that the plaintiff whs clearly entitled to the relief which he prayed. Webber v. Gage, 39 N. H., 182.

But counsel for the defendant have endeavored to distinguish this case, in principle, from that of Pettigrew v. Evansville, above cited. It is claimed that there are two points of difference. 1st, That in the "Wisconsin case the proceedings for the injunction were commenced before the completion of the ditch; and 2d, That in the latter ease the threatened damage reached almost the whole of the plaintiff’s land, while here only a few acres in one corner of the farm are affected. These we regard as finely drawn distinctions without any substantial difference whatever. We are not aware of any rule by which the mere ¿¡.elay of the .plaintiff in the assertion of his right, until it was actually invaded, will operate either to deprive him of it, or to relieve the defendant in any degree from the effect of his unlawful encroachment thereon. And as to the right affected by the alleged nuisance, the law admits, of no distinction in its mode of redress, whether it pertain to fifty acres, or only to five acres of the plaintiff’s land. It is the nature of the injury, together with the fact of its constant repetition, or continuation, rather than the magnitude of. the damage inflicted, which form the basis of this mode of redress.

*48Eor these reasons the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

Reversed.

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