18 App. D.C. 381 | D.C. Cir. | 1901
delivered the opinion of the-Court:
This action was brought by the appellants, Annie T. Frisbie and William B. Frisbie, against the appellees, John K. Cowen and Oscar G. Murray, as receivers of the Baltimore- and Ohio Railroad Company, to recover damages for an alleged injury to property occasioned by the wrongful discharge of water from an artificial ditch draining the tracks- and roadway of the railroad company.
It is shown, both by allegation and proof, that the appellants owned a piece or lot of ground contiguous to the line-of the railroad, and several feet lower than the tracks, and upon which lot there is a house. Many years ago the rail
The defendants pleaded the general issue of not guilty, and at the trial the plaintiffs gave evidence to show, that in the year 1897, and after the construction or enlargement of the ditch along the track of the road, and the construction or enlargement of the outlet thereof, a great volume of water was discharged from the ditch through the outlet upon the lot of the plaintiffs after every rain, so that the ground was made more wet and muddy than it had theretofore been, and the lower story of the house on the lot was often overflowed to the depth of sixteen or eighteen inches, and other damage was done to the house and the lot. That by reason of the premises the lower floor of the house became uninhabitable, and the house itself was damaged to such an extent that it would cost about $460 to put it in repair. That the plaintiffs' had, in or about the month of December, 1898, constructed a dam at the mouth of the outlet, thereby stopping the discharge of water from the ditch, since which time the premises had been uninjured by water.
The defendants then gave evidence to show that the ditch alongside the track of the roadbed had for many years existed upon the company’s right of way, and that the servants of the company had always been in the habit of cleaning it out and keeping it open, but that it had not been in recent years enlarged, and that the outlet leading to the plaintiffs’ lot
This was in substance the entire evidence as produced plaintiffs and defendants; and upon this evidence the plaintiffs prayed the court to direct the jury, that they must return a verdict for the plaintiffs in such sum as would fairly and fully compensate them for the damage done to their property by the increased flow of water upon their land caused by the ditch upon the land of the railroad company; and in fixing the amount of the verdict for the plaintiffs the jury should allow a sum which would compensate the plaintiffs for the cost of such repair as might be found to have been made necessary by the increased flow of water caused by the ditch on the land of the railroad company, and such additional amount as might be found to be necessary to remedy the damage due to the same cause. This request by the plaintiffs was refused by the court, and- to which refusal the plaintiffs excepted.
This part of the instruction, so far as it goes, is right enough, and it has not been excepted to; but the court proceeds, in the next paragraph, to qualify the instruction thus given, by saying to the jury: “But if the water that came from the railroad ditch through the ditch cut at right angles leading onto the land of the plaintiffs came, as the ditch was constructed by the defendants, onto the land of the plaintiffs through this ditch and did not run onto or into the house, but ran across the lot of the plaintiffs, not in any stream which had banks to it and a channel, but over the land, seeping into the soil to some extent, perhaps, and running across it to some extent — if that was the case before the injury to the house, and then the plaintiffs themselves in the management of their property graded it, no matter for what purpose, if for any legitimate purpose, and so graded it that if caused the water instead of running over the lot to run
“ If you find that the water, as I have already said to you, was caused by the act of the defendants to run through this ditch and into the house without any effort on the part of the plaintiffs which caused it to run into the house, in that event you should find for the plaintiffs; and your verdict should be such damages for injury to the house as you find from the evidence was caused by the water that was so turned from the railroad ditch by the defendants onto the lot 'and onto and into the house of the plaintiffs.”
It is to this qualifying and restrictive part of the general charge of the court, which we have recited, that the plaintiffs excepted. The theory of the instruction appears to be that the defendants had the right to discharge the accumulated water from the artificial 'ditch through the cutaway into the depression or gully on the plaintiffs’ lot, and that the latter filled up the depression and levelled their lot at their own peril of having the lot flooded and their house submerged in water, without the right to question the power of the defendants to discharge the water from the ditch by the outlet or cutaway onto the lot of the plaintiffs. In this we think there was manifest error.
As will be observed from the terms of the instruction given, the learned court below would seem to have been under the impression that the injury to the plaintiffs’ house on the lot over which the water was discharged from the ditch was the only injury of which the plaintiffs complained, or for which they could recover. The court seems to have overlooked the extent. of the injury complained of in the
Whatever difference there may be supposed to exist as between the rule of the civil law and that of the common law in regard to the manner of treating surface water naturally flowing from an upper to a lower tenement,.such difference can be of no importance in a case like the present. This, as appears from the facts we have stated, is not the ease of the natural flow of surface water, arising from natural causes only and flowing without artificial means; but is the case of the gathering and concentration of surface water from an extensive area, into an artificial channel or drain, and discharging it upon the premises of a lower proprietor to his injury. This, according to all principle, is regarded as a wrong for which the law affords a remedy. The principle is settled, both by the English and American decisions, that where the higher owner collects the surface water in one,
In a recent case in the Court of Appeal of England, that of Whalley v. Lancashire & Yorkshire RR. Co., 13 Q. B. Div. 131, the question has been very fully considered and the principle applied.' There, by reason of a very severe rainfall, a quantity of water was accumulated against one of the sides of the defendants’ railway embankment to such am extent as to endanger the embankment, and, in order to protect their embankment, the defendants cut trenches in it by which the water flowed through and went ultimately onto the land of the plaintiff, which was on the opposite side of the embankment and at a lower level, and flooded and-injured it to a greater extent than it would have done had
The same principle was in very unqualified terms asserted and applied by the Court of Common Pleas, in the case of Baird v. Williamson, 33 Law J. 101. That was the case of water pumped from a mine and allowed to escape over land of a lower proprietor. In that case the defense was that the water had been discharged from the mine with great care to avoid damage, but the court held that to be no excuse for the injury done the plaintiff.
In the American courts the question has been frequently under consideration, where railroad companies have, by ditches along their tracks, gathered the surface water, and by drains turned it off on the lands of adjoining lower proprietors, and the courts have uniformly held, as the English courts have held, that the railroad companies were liable for the damage thus produced. In all such cases it has been held that there was no right, either by the civil or common law, to concentrate or accumulate the surface water in ditches along the tracks or bed of the road and by cutaways or outlets turn it upon the lower adjoining or adjacent lands to the injury of the proprietors thereof. Curtis v. Eastern RR. Co., 98 Mass. 428; Springfield, etc., RR. Co. v. Henry,, 44 Ark. 360; Toledo, etc., RR. Co. v. Morrison, 71 Ill. 616; Hogenson v. St. Paul, etc., RR. Co., 31 Minn. 224; Missouri Pac. RR. Co. v. Keys, 55 Kans. 205; Mayor v. Sikes, 94 Ga. 30; Kansas City RR. Co. v. Smith, 72 Miss. 677; Kansas City RR. Co. v. Lackey, 72 Miss. 881; Waffle v.
In several of the cases it has been said that surface water is a common enemy that the owner may repel from his premises without incurring liability to his lower adjoining proprietors, but an exception is always recognized to the general rule, and that exception is, that it is not allowable to an upper owner to collect the surface water by means of ditches or drains and discharge it on the premises of a lower owner. If he does so he is liable for all the consequences.
It would seem from the part of the instruction of the court given, and to which exception was taken, that the case was submitted to the jury on the single question, whether there was damage done to the house of the plaintiffs, and whether that damage was the result of the grading of the lot by the plaintiffs, thereby disturbing what was supposed to be a lawful right of drainage by the defendants of the artificial ditch along the railroad track. But there is no question of prescription raised and relied upon by the defendants as giving them the right of drainage through the lot of the plaintiffs; and it is conceded on all sides, both by court and counsel, that the depression or gully, as it is called, in the lot of the plaintiffs was not a natural watercourse. The defendants had no right to utilize the depression or gully in the lot of the plaintiffs for the purpose of receiving the water from the ditch along the railroad tracks; and the plaintiffs had a perfect right, in the absence of a prescriptive right of drainage by the defendants, to fill up and level their lot to suit their own purposes. As to what will constitute a natural watercourse into which a party may be entitled to discharge the gathered or accumulated waters from an artificial drain, see the case of Gibbs v. Williams, 25 Kans. 210. The owners of the lot with such a depression in it were under no legal obligation to receive the flow of water that was turned into it, and they were at liberty to fill up the depression whenever it suited their purpose. Ib. See also the case of Nogenson v. St. Paul, etc., RR. Co., 31 Minn. 224.
In the present case, the plaintiffs, in the latter part of the year 1898, did construct a dam across the mouth of the out let from the ditch, and thereby stopped the discharge of the water on their lot, and it does not appear that the defendants made any objection to such assertion and exercise of right by the plaintiffs. On the contrary, finding it necessary for the protection of their tracks, they extended the ditch about 200 yards within their right of way, so as to make it discharge the water therefrom into a stream that ran under the tracks.
Without deeming it necessary to decide whether the first prayer offered by the plaintiffs, requiring the verdict to be rendered for the plaintiffs, was not too general, and, therefore, properly rejected, we shall, for the reasons stated, reverse the judgment below for errors in the general charge 'to the jury; and it is so ordered.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.