210 N.W. 626 | Minn. | 1926
A general demurrer to the complaint was sustained and this appeal followed. The question to be determined is whether a county is liable to a landowner for damages caused by the construction of a drainage ditch in the manner and under the circumstances alleged in the complaint.
In support of their contention that the county is liable, counsel for appellant cite Peters v. Town of Fergus Falls,
In the last case the town and its officers in charge of public highways were enjoined from removing an embankment across a ravine from which surface waters were cast upon plaintiff's land before a county ditch was constructed on one of the boundary lines of the land. The embankment dammed the ravine. Plaintiff was assessed for the benefits resulting from the construction of the ditch. A town road ran along the embankment. It was proposed to remove the earth fill across the ravine and to put a bridge over the gap thus permitting the water to escape from the ditch to plaintiff's land. It was held that the control which town authorities have over public highways was not broad enough to justify the threatened action. It is urged that, if a town is liable for the negligent acts of the supervisors in charge of its highways, which result in the flooding of land adjacent to a public highway, a county should be held liable for the negligence of the county board in supervising the construction of a county drainage ditch.
Counsel for the county rely upon Gaare v. Board of Co. Commrs.
The duties of a town board, in matters pertaining to the construction and maintenance of public highways, are quite different from those of a county board in constructing and maintaining drainage ditches. As said in Peters v. Town of Fergus Falls, supra, a town *82 has a qualified or special property in the land occupied by a public highway. A county has no proprietary interest in the land over which a drainage ditch is laid. The duties of a county board, when a petition for the establishment of a county drainage ditch is presented, are defined by statute. The powers and duties of the board are of a limited nature and are not as broad as those of town boards in reference to public highways. The only section of the statute which seems to bear upon the question of liability for damage arising after the construction of a county ditch is G.S. 1923, § 6728. Without stopping to consider whether the language of the section is broad enough to cover a case such as this, we think it is safe to say that the statute evinces an intention on the part of the legislature to provide a special method of procedure when lands adjacent to a drainage ditch are damaged after the ditch has been constructed. By providing the method of ascertaining the damage and making compensation therefor, it may be inferred that the legislature intended to limit an injured landowner's right to redress and prevent him from seeking compensation in any other manner than that prescribed by statute.
We conclude that the facts pleaded are not sufficient to charge the county with liability.
Order affirmed. *83