135 P. 247 | Idaho | 1913
This action was commenced by the respondent to recover damages from appellant for flooding and overflowing about five acres of sand beach or bathing beach owned by her and situated along and adjacent to the waters of Lake Coeur d’Alene.
It is charged by the complaint that the damages accrued by reason and on account of the flooding and overflowing of her land for the years 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910, and 1911. It is charged by the complaint that the water was raised to a height of about five feet above the ordinary and natural height of the water in the lake, by reason of the fact that the appellant maintains a dam across the Spokane river, which is the outlet to this lake, and that on top of this dam it has erected and maintained a contrivance called a bear-trap which is raised each season for the purpose of holding the water above its ordinary height during the summer season. It is alleged that the damage in this case consisted in raising the water and flooding and overflowing the sand beach around the lake and in front of respondent’s property, so as to impair respondent’s property and make it less valuable for a summer resort and especially for bathing purposes and recreation and amusement. Judgment was entered in favor of the respondent herein and an appeal was thereupon prosecuted.
Two principal questions are submitted for the consideration of this court: First, has the plaintiff lost the right to maintain this action by reason of having dedicated all her right, title and interest in and to the beach lands described in her complaint to the public by reason of platting the lands and filing the plat thereof, accompanied with a dedication of the streets and avenues indicated thereon? Second, has the plaintiff been barred from recovering damages in this action by reason of the intervention of any or all of the several statutes of limitations set up as defenses in the answer, or has she lost her right to maintain the action because of any prescriptive right acquired by the water and power company?
Addressing our attention to the first proposition, it appears that the respondent laid off her lands in blocks and lots intersected by streets and avenues and filed a plat thereof in
In Poole v. City of Lake Forest, 238 Ill. 305, 87 N. E. 320, the court held that the filing of the plat of an addition bordering on Lake Michigan, showing the lot line as coming to the top of the bluff, did not amount to a dedication of the strip of land between the top of the bluff, or the lot line and the water line, to the public.
The foregoing cases, in all their essential elements, are in point in the present case and support the position that the filing of the plat herein did not amount to dedicating the lake beach to the public.
This brings us to the question of right by prescription and the statute of limitations being a bar to the right of recovery in this case. We know of no authority which holds that a party can acquire a prescriptive right in the property of another short of the period within which the statute of limitations will run. We will, therefore, address our attention to the specific question as to the application of the statute of limitations in this case. The dam and structure which holds the water and causes the overflow complained of was erected in 1906, and has been used and in operation for the purpose of impounding and holding the water in Lake Coeur d’Alene each season since 1907. The effect of this dam is stated by appellant in its brief as follows: “The dam does not raise the water in Lake Coeur d’Alene but simply retards its waters in their runoff. In the spring during the high-water season the water is much higher. It simply tends to prevent the water from falling as rapidly as it did prior to the construction of the present dam.” The water collects in Lake Coeur d’Alene from various streams emptying into it during the winter and spring until the elevation is raised six or eight feet above the
Before passing to the consideration of the main question, we may refer to the Petajaniemi ease, as far as it has any bearing on this question, by quoting what was said in that opinion on this particular question. The court said: “The case was tried by all parties on the theory that all the land permanently submerged below the elevation of 2,128 feet above mean sea level was for all practical purposes permanently taken, and that respondents should recover on that theory and principle of law.” Of course, if the case were tried by both the plaintiff and defendant on the theory that the land had been either permanently taken and appropriated or destroyed so as to render it permanently useless to the owner, a judgment rendered and entered on that theory would preclude any future or further recovery, whether the taking or appropriation was in fact permanent and absolute or not. This is the most that can be said for that ease.
The Kroeger case, however, presents a different aspect. There the railroad company had taken and appropriated a strip of Kroeger’s land and built its track thereon. In so doing it had made a considerable excavation in Kroeger’s land
Turning to the present case, we find a state of facts in many respects dissimilar from the facts of the Kroeger case. Here the dam and bear-trap erected by appellant was on its own land and premises, and was a lawful structure many miles (perhaps 15 or 20 miles) removed from respondent’s land. The dam itself did not cause this overflow. The overflow is caused only by raising what is called the bear-trap on top of the dam. Respondent could not foresee when this bear-trap was to be raised and when lowered or the season of the year at which appellant would raise it, nor could she foresee the effect it would have in flooding and overflowing her lands when it should be raised. No complaint is made by respondent in this case of the permanent flooding or permanent taking or destruction of her land. On the contrary, that idea is impliedly refuted by the complaint itself, which alleges that “said sand beach or bathing beach lands of said plaintiff prior to the acts complained of in this complaint were the principal natural attraction to visitors and summer residents at La Delcardo Bay, and were one of the principal elements
This case differs even from many of the other overflow cases which have found their way into this court as a result of the construction of this same dam and bear-trap. Here apparently the land overflowed a bathing beach which is not used except in the summer season. At any other season of the year it would perhaps be of no special damage to have it overflow. The fact that the land has been flooded and overflowed during any previous season or number of seasons would in no
The distinction here noted has been considered and discussed at great length by courts and text-writers, and we shall not even attempt to review or analyze the authorities on this point, but will rather be content with citing some of the principal ones and calling attention to such decisions and authorities as contain the leading discussions on the subject.
The supreme court of Iowa, in Harvey v. Mason City & Fort Dodge R. Co., 129 Iowa, 465, 113 Am. St. Rep. 483, 105 N. W. 958, 3 L. R. A., N. S., 973, has treated this subject quite learnedly, and in addition to the text of the opinion, there is an interesting note appended to the ease as reported in the Lawyers’ Reports, Annotated. There is also to be found a most exhaustive and interesting note to the case of Chicago etc. R. Co. v. Loeb, reported in 118 Ill. 203, 59 Am. Rep. 341, 8 N. E. 460. The note to this latter case deals at length with the distinction between cases where one injury has been inflicted and one recovery only can be had for a permanent injury or destruction, and a case where repeated injuries have beén inflicted or a continuing nuisance has been maintained and repeated trespasses made, wherein several and repeated actions may be maintained and recoveries made.
We conclude that the statute of limitations did not run from the date of the first trespass and injury against all subsequent damages and causes of action, but that each cause of action accrued as the injury was inflicted and consequent damage was sustained, and that the statute of limitations would run only from that time. What has been said in effect disposes of the question of prescriptive right.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs in favor of respondent.