Eimers v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co.

158 Ill. App. 557 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1910

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court.

First. Appellants’ first proposition is true with the limitation that no landowner has the legal right in Illinois to drain even mere surface waters to any natural watercourse other than the ones to which they would naturally flow by way of their own natural water shed. No landowner has the right to divert surface waters or the flow of watercourses from their natural channels and thereby overflow the lands of another without rendering to him proper compensation for his damages by reason of such overflow. Where a railroad company diverts the flow of a watercourse or the flow of mere surface waters and conducts them through a ditch or otherwise through a natural water barrier to a point where they overflow the land of another, the company will be liable for such damages as result therefrom. The fact that such waters are first conducted into a natural watercourse leading to or through the lands damaged will not change this liability provided such waters cause such natural watercourse to overflow its banks to the damage of such other landowner. The E. St. L. & C. Ry. Co. v. Eisentraut, 134 Ill. 96, and 34 Ill. App. 563; The C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Glenney, 118 Ill. 487 and 28 Ill. App. 364; The J., N. W. and S. E. R. R. Co. v. Cox, 91 Ill. 500; Graham v. Keene, 143 Ill. 425. In the case of Fenton ahd Thompson R. R. Co. v. Adams, 221 Ill. 201, our Supreme Court has stated the conditions under which barriers to the natural flow of water may be removed and standing surface waters drained onto or through the servient estate. On page 211 of that opinion the court says: “If an owner have upon his land when the surface is in its natural state, a basin in which water accumulates, and from which, when filled and overflowing, the water passes in a particular place where the rim of the basin is lower than elsewhere, and there flows through a depression to and upon the land of another, the natural outlet.and natural course for that water is through that low place in the rim and through that depression and the owner may lawfully cut down the rim and deepen the depression upon his own land so as to entirely drain the basin and cause the water therefrom to pass through the depression to and upon the land of his neighbor, if the neighbor’s land be low enough to entirely drain the basin, even though the amount of water flowing-through this depression to the servient heritage is thereby increased, and water which would be retained in the basin if the rim and depression were left as in a state of nature and never reach.the land of the neighbor, is thereby cast upon his heritage.” And again on page 213 the court says: “A proprietor of land may change the course of a natural watercourse within the limits of his own land if he restores it to the original channel before the lands of another are reached, provided in changing the course of the stream he does not cast upon the lands of an adjoining proprietor water which would not in a course of nature flow upon such adjoining premises.” These authorities clearly establish the doctrine that if one proprietor by tearing away natural barriers carries water upon the land of another which has fallen upon an entirely different water shed from that into which it is carried, the former proprietor will be liable to the latter for all damages caused by such unnatural flow of water.

It is said by appellants that while the embankments of the L. & M. and Wabash which were built before appellants’ road, constituted barriers to the direct fl'ow of the water east of those embankments through appellee’s lands before appellants’ embankment was built, yet they were not natural barriers, and that it cannot be successfully maintained that appellants did not have the right with the consent of those roads, to place tile therein and thereby drain its own lands into east fork. Even if this be conceded, we do not understand that appellee is complaining of all the waters that came from between these two roads. As to those waters between these two other roads that flowed into the main Hinch Branch before appellants’ road was built, of course it can make no difference now whether they reached appellee’s lands by the main branch or by east fork as the result would be practically the same. The water complained of by appellee that falls between those two roads as we understand it falls on lands lying north of the public road on the township line, and the elevations given on the plat show that these waters naturally flow north and against appellants’ embankment. The same is true of the waters falling just east of the L. & M. and north of the township line. Mr. Sheppard, the civil engineer who testified for appellee, states that none of these waters ever naturally flowed into Hinch Branch or Cahokia Creek. It does not seem to us that the plat in evidence in any wise contradicts him. As to the waters east of the L. & M. and south of the township line the evidence shows that they reach Silver Creek through the small stream running south and near the east side of the L. & M. road, and the plat strongly corroborates it though no elevations are given there.

Second. It is contended by appellant that it had no legal duty to put culverts under its embankments, so that the water would flow away; but that it had a right to obstruct and hold by its embankments the mere flow of surface waters. While this principle is only indirectly involved in this case, yet as a principle of law it is not sustained by our Supreme Court. The complaint of appellee in this case is that appellants obstructed the natural flow of surface water and also diverted and carried it into his lands, and that such water in a course of nature never could have reached his lands. There is no law to compel appellant to put culverts under its embankments to allow mere surface waters to flow in their usual way to their natural course, provided that in diverting said water it reaches its natural watercourse on the land of appellants and is not backed onto the land of another. It is held in Chic., P. & St. L. Ry. Co. of Ill. v. Reuter, 223 Ill. 387, that if a railroad company by the negligent or improper construction of its railroad embankment causes the land of an adjacent owner to be overflowed and damaged by surface waters that it will be liable for the damage of each overflow as in case of a nuisance. In other words such a structure as will so obstruct the natural flow of surface waters as unnecessarily to overflow the land of another and cause unnecessary damage that reasonable and practical skill and engineering would obviate, is not a legal or permanent structure, but may be treated as a nuisance and will subject the railroad company to endless litigation until the nuisance is abated. O. & M. Ry. Co. v. Wachter, 123 Ill. 440.

Third. By the testimony of Charles E. Sheppard, a civil engineer, and witness for appellee, it appears that the natural waters that fell on four hundred acres of land on the north side of appellants’ embankment, and on one hundred and fifty acres of land south of the embankment, that never could have reached the lands of appellee by their natural watercourses, were by means of appellants’ embankments, borrow pits and tiles collected against the sides of the embankment and diverted and carried into the east fork of Hinch Branch. On the north side of the embankment these continuous borrow pits all connected by tiles or pipes extended for more than two and one half miles east of this branch. Practically the only escape for these waters on both sides of the embankment was through this branch. When the waters on the north side over-filled the borrow pits and backed up very high a portion 'of these waters would escape south into Silver Creek on the public road after first passing through the McKinley Arch. Many of appellee’s witnesses state that the waters would back up so high that it would be two and three feet deep in the arch on the public road. This public road must be some higher than the natural surface of the earth there or it would not have those water pipes under its embankment. The elevations shown on the plat in evidence, admitted, to be correct, show the natural surface of the earth at the side of. this public road to be about four feet higher than at the surface at the Wabash crossing and about six feet higher than the bottom of the pipes under the Wabash embankment. These pipes must then have been submerged in water some seven to nine feet over their tops during these times of high water. The widest borrow pits are at the Wabash crossing and it is near a half mile from there back to the McKinley Arch. As the volume of water discharged westward depends upon the pressure and as pressure is measured by the heighth of the water, it can readily be seen that these two pipes under such conditions would discharge a very large volume of water to be carried by so small a branch.’ It must also .be remembered too that the waters were also collecting from the north against this embankment west of the Wabash in addition to the waters coming through the embankment of the Wabash and that the tiles or pipes west of the Wabash at the public road crossings were twenty-four inch pipes, and that the tile of pipe in the branch and connecting the waters of both sides of this embankment, is a thirty-six inch pipe. All this water too was in addition to that that nature had cut the branch to accommodate, and in high waters the branches would naturally receive all the waters from its own natural sources for which it had proper capacity. Many of appellee’s witnesses followed this water flow for this whole two miles and a half east of this branch during high waters, and down from there to appellee’s lands. They testify that the flow was continuous all the way to his lands, that the branch was higher than ever known, and that after the waters got down the steep grade in this branch from the railroad to the bottom lands where the grade was slight and the flow more sluggish, that the waters broke over on to plaintiff’s lands, submerging as much as forty acres of hi's cleared lands at a time and causing the damages complained of. Appellants insist that it is inconceivable that the water could come so far and in such volume through those pipes. We are wholly unable to see what long distance has to do in slowing the flow or in lessening the volume of water. Besides there are no pipes where these waters enter this branch. The evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses is too voluminous to discuss in detail, there being thirty-five of them besides himself. According to their evidence the embankment of appellants caused all or most all the damage to appellee, and while contradicted in many essential things by the fourteen witnesses for appellants, the best that could be said of it for appellants, is that this testimony is in hopeless conflict, and it is peculiarly a question for the jury to decide the questions of liability in this case.' We have studied with great care the theory of the appellants that plaintiff’s damages and the ditches or swales cut across his lands were caused by the waters of Cahokia Creek breaking out over its banks near the present mouth of Pieper branch and flowing straight down south across Hinch Branch and thence southwest across plaintiff’s lands to Cahokia Creek again. Much of this evidence is circumstantial and to the effect that the corn and grass and other vegetation north of Hinch Branch where these swales start were bent in the direction of Hinch Branch, showing that the water flowed that way, and also by the further circumstances of drift wood and other debris being shown along there. Much of the evidence is positive and is contradicted by as much or more positive evidence by plaintiff. Many witnesses testify that appellee’s premises were in about the same condition before appellant’s road was built as on the day suit was brought. As many more contradict these statements. As to the circumstantial evidence which we always regard as very valuable, it is much weakened by the further evidence that just north of these swales and in their line on the north side of Hinch Branch there is at present another branch flowing out of the hills and the woods into Hinch Branch and also an old and former channel of Pieper branch that runs to or about the same point from the north, also emptying into Hinch Branch. As the slope of the country there is toward Hinch Branch from the north we do not feel justified in saying that the jury were not warranted in saying that very much of this debris and sign of waters flowing there were the result of natural waters coming down these channels from sources other than Cahokia Creek, and particularly so as the great wash and damages thereby are south of Hinch Branch. As to the amount of damages it is sufficient to say that the evidence of appellee’s witnesses was ample to sustain the full amount of the judgment and much more. The evidence is also in hopeless conflict on this question. Appellee’s witnesses fixed the damages to the cleared lands.alone at about thirty dollars per acre, while a few of appellants’ witnesses stated he was damaged some, but not nearly so much as the others fixed it, and several of appellants’ witnesses would tend to show that he suffered no damages at all as appellants’ embankment in no way damaged him. It is however shown by evidence from both sides that there are about ten acres or more of cleared lands there entirely ruined by these swales or washes, and that he had from thirty-five to fifty acres of corn almost entirely ruined in 1905 after it had matured and was shocked and that he about lost his crop in 1906 on account of overflows however caused. In view of the condition of the evidence, and in further consideration of the fact that the plaintiff has had two verdicts in his favor on these facts, we do not feel warranted in saying that the verdict is manifestly against the weight of the evidence or the result of prejudice, etc.

Fourth. There is no error in the giving of any of appellee’s instructions. By the first instruction the court told the jury, “If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff has proven his allegations as set forth in the amended declaration or any count thereof, then you should find the defendant guilty.” And by the second instruction the jury were told that it is not necessary for the plaintiff to prove the facts set out in every count of the amended declaration, but that the plaintiff is entitled to recover if he proves by a preponderance of the evidence the allegations contained in any one count. These instructions in substance have been many times approved. St. L. A. & T. H. R. R. Co. v. Holman, 155 Ill. 21; C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Harrington, 90 Ill. App. 638; C. & A. Ry. Co. v. Hatfield, 109 Ill. App. 556; Central Ry. Co. v. Bannister, 195 Ill. 48; Donk Bros. Coal Co. v. Thil, 228 Ill. 233. It is only necessary for plaintiff to prove one good count in a declaration to recover. It is only necessary for him to prove the material allegations of any one count. There is no objection that will serve appellant, to a court saying to the jury that he is entitled to recover if he proves all his allegations in any one count. That is what said instructions require. If he had limited the requirements to proving the material allegations, then it would have been necessary to inform the jury what were the material allegations without leaving them to settle the question as to what allegations were material. A specific objection to the first instruction by appellants is that it does not require proof by a preponderance of the evidence. Other instructions of appellants plainly told the jury that plaintiff was required to prove his case by the preponderance of the evidence. It is not necessary to repeat this in every instruction given. Besides proving his case by the evidence “means no more nor no less” than proving it by the preponderance of the evidence. See case last cited, 228 Ill. 233. The third instruction of appellee is criticised by appellants because it uses the expression, “by the construction of a railroad and borrow pits in question caused water to be led into. Hinch Branch,” etc., instead of saying “by means of the pipes and the tile.” The pipes and tile may be properly considered a part of the railroad construction or borrow pits either. It took all of them to make the railroad structure and perhaps all of them to cause plaintiff’s damages, if any. The jury could not have been misled thereby.

Finding no reversible error in this record, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.

Affirmed.