271 Mo. 655 | Mo. | 1917
-Plaintiffs sued for damages caused by overflow of land, alleging that such overflow was caused by the building of the embankment for the defendant’s railroad. A demurrer to the petition was sustained, and there was a. judgment accordingly, from which plaintiffs have appealed.
The parties have not furnished us with any plat of the situation, but we have made one in accordance with the facts so far as they appear to us, as'follows:
. We have not shown Fish Creek on that plat, for the reason that its relative position is not shown by the petition or by the statement of the appellants.
“That at the point on said river where defendant’s railroad crosses the same the channel of said river is so narrow that it does not afford a sufficient outlet for all of the water flowing into said river from up stream, from said point in any ordinary freshet or rainy season.
“That in the original construction of said railroad where the same crosses the bottom land adjacent to and-west of said river, for a distance of nearly five miles to a point where the high land is not subject to overflow, is reached, defendant caused trestles to be constructed at intervals whereon its ties and rails were laid, thus and thereby affording ample outlet for water from the Missouri River coming up stream and. overflowing the banks of the river, which were thereafter collected into and flowed southward through Shockley’s Branch and Fish Creek, two efficient and adequate drains through which the said overflow waters found its way across the said bottom and into the Missouri River, a short distance south of defendant’s roadbed. That thereafter defendant negligently and wrongfully dammed up both of the said streams and wrongfully erected in lieu of the trestle works which constituted a rest and support for its ties and rails aforesaid, and which afforded ample and efficient openings through the road-bed an outlet for the water which overflowed the banks of the river aforesaid and prevented the backing up of said water on plaintiff’s land, a high strong embankment made of earth and stone extending across the entire bottom lands and adjacent to the said river from the wést bank thereof, to the high land not subject to overflow, thus and thereby completely obstructing both of the aforesaid drains and rendering the free and uninterrupted natural and efficient flow of said water carried by said stream in times of ordinary freshets and rainy seasons, impossible, and caused the said water to be blocked and to be pre*662 vented from flowing, and to be backed np on tbe lands of plaintiff near said bank and to the northward thereof.
“That defendant has not since the year 1900 maintained any openings through and across its roadbed or any ditches or drains along the north side of its right of way, connected with openings through and across its roadbed, connected with natural drains aforesaid, in which manner the said overflow water from the Missouri River could and would be carried off, which said openings and connecting ditches could and would have prevented the said water from backing upon and overflowing the lands of the plaintiffs as aforesaid.
“Plaintiffs say that the two aforesaid drains were ample and sufficient to carry the said overflow waters of the Missouri River and to prevent the same from backing up and overflowing plaintiff’s said land, had defendant constructed proper and adequate openings through its said roadbeds and ditches along its said right of way connectedwith said drains and had constructed proper and adequate drains along the north side of said roadhed connected with said openings.
“That during the month of June, 1909, because of said embankment so constructed and maintained by defendant as aforesaid, the water of the Missouri River was caused to back upon and overflow and completely inundate two hundred and eighty acres of plaintiff’s farm land, destroying his crops, drowning and otherwise injuring his live stock and damaging and injuring his buildings, fences and orchards on said land and injuring his said land in its actual and selling value as follows:
74 acres of corn of the value of......' $2211.00
99 acres of wheat of the value of .... 3465.00
1 acre of potatoes of the value of____ 100.00
Hay of the value of................ 100.00
Meadow of the value of ............ 50.00
Ice of the value of 50.00
Injury to buildings, fences, orchards, .stock, etc....................... 4200.00
Total $10176.00
*663 “Plaintiff further states that by the use of ordinary care and by the expenditure of ordinary sums of money, defendant’s railroad built, constructed and maintained across the bottom lands aforesaid, could have been so built, constructed and maintained as to afford ample outlet for the overflow water aforesaid, by maintaining sufficient openings through its roadbed and across its right of way connected with the two aforesaid drains and by maintaining sufficient ditches along the north side of the roadbed, connected with said openings; but that defendant negligently and wrongfully failed, neglected and refused to maintain such openings and such ditches, which said failure of defendant caused the overflow of said plaintiff’s "land, and the damage that resulted to him as aforesaid.
“Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment against the defendant on the first count of his petition in the sum of $10,176, and for his costs in this cause expended.”
The second count of the petition is a suit for damages at common law growing out of the same overflow.
Appellant’s statement contains the following:
“The Missouri River running in a west to east direction constitutes the south boundary line of Chariton County, and from that point where appellant’s lands are located, across the south part of the county, the west-to-east line is almost direct. On the east side of Chariton County, and about half a mile north of the town of Glasgow, the Missouri River makes a very sharp turn; and flows past the town of -Glasgow in practically a southern direction. At the south side of the town of Glasgow the Chicago & Alton Railway Company has built its bridge east and west across the Missouri River at the narrowest point in the Missouri River channel between Kansas City and St. Louis. Its roadbed runs practically parallel with the Missouri River from the west end of the Glasgow bridge to a point known as Gilliam Hill five miles and a half west therefrom, on the south or Saline County side of the Missouri River.
“Appellant’s lands are located at a point about five miles north and west of the central portion of this five-*664 and-a-lialf-mile stretch of respondent’s roadbed on the north side of the river in Chariton County.
“The land over which respondent’s road is built from the west end of Glasgow bridge to Gilliam Hill is very low, and has been subject to overflow from the Missouri River from time out of memory. In 1873 when the railroad was first built across this land a trestle six hundred feet in length was constructed at the west end of the bridge. About one mile out a trestle eighty feet long was constructed in the road bed; about two and a half miles from the west end of the bridge a trestle one hundred and twenty-five feet long was, built in the roadbed ; about one mile from there another eighty-foot trestle was constructed and a trestle one hundred and twenty-five feet long was constructed in the roadbed at the foot of Gilliam Hill. At the time of this construction a small stream came down from the hill lands and flowed north through the trestle at the foot of Gilliam Hill, flowed eastwardlly parallel to the track and between the track and the Missouri River to the second one-hundred- and-twenty-five-foot trestle, flowed south through that trestle and in a southeasterly direction until it struck Fish Creek and the water found outlet in the Missouri River near Saline City some five or six miles south of the town of Glasgow.
“Sometime in the latter eighties, respondent caused its roadbed to be so modified and constructed that all of these trestles were filled, damming the streams, and a solid embankment was maintained from Gilliam Hill to a point within six hundred feet of the west end of the Glasgow bridge, and about-the year 1900 they further modified the construction of the roadbed by filling the trestle work at the west end of the bridge, so that since about the year 1900 they have maintained their roadbed from the west end of the Glasgow bridge to Gilliam Hill, a distance of five and one-half miles, at an average height of nine and one-half feet across these low bottom lands subject to overflow without a single solitary opening of any kind or character through their roadbed.”
I. It does not appear that the smaller streams mentioned in plaintiffs’ petition have any connection with the river north of the railroad. If either of those smaller streams extended from the channel of the river north of the railroad across the railroad to the river again on the south, and if defendant’s roadbed obstructed such channel, there would be a different case here to consider. But, so far as is shown by the petition and the statement of plaintiffs! counsel, there is a strip of land between the channel of the river and those smaller creeks. It should not be overlooked that the land of plaintiffs is north of the river. The plaintiffs are not concerned in the land or the creeks south of the river except insofar as the damming of the water in the creeks, and the shutting off of the overflow water across the intervening strip, may prevent the river from overflowing southward, thus causing the overflow of plaintiffs’ land. In other words, the whole merits of the plaintiffs’ case would have been presented if the petition had simply stated that the defendant had constructed its roadbed along and on the south bank of the river, without any openings therein and of such a height as to shut off the overflow to the south, and to thus increase the rise in the river so as to overflow plaintiffs’ land on the north. If the plaintiffs have no rights under the supposed case, then they have none under the case alleged in the petition. We will proceed to consider the supposed case, as that is clearer than the one stated, being free from any complications with the smaller streams or with the overflow of the intervening space.
II. The common law rule as to surface water is stated in Angell on Watercourses (7 Ed.), sec. 108a, thus:
*665 “A conterminous proprietor may change the situation or surface of his land by raising or filling it to a*666 higher grade, by the construction of dikes, the erection of structures, or by other improvements which cause water to accumulate from naturai causes on adjacent land and prevent it from passing off over the surface. Such consequences are the necessary result of the lawful appropriation of land, whatever may be its nature, and although, they may cause detriment and loss to others.”
We are aware that it is sometimes skid that in making such embankments there must be no negligence or unskillfulness. It has been said that one proprietor cannot collect the surface water on his premises and turn it in a stream onto his neighbor’s land. But it has never been held to be negligence or unskillfulness at common law for one proprietor to embank against surface water flowing onto his land from the adjoining land, but, on the contrary, his right to so protect himself has been uniformly vindicated by that law.
Prior to 1879 that rule was uniformly followed as the law in this State. [Clark’s Admr. v. Railroad, 36 Mo. 202; Jones v. Hannovan, 55 Mo. 462; Hosher v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 329.]
But in McCormick v. Railroad, 70 Mo. 359, and in Shane v. Railroad, 71 Mo. 237, that rule was abandoned and the contrary rule of the civil law was applied, Hough, J., dissenting in both cases.
The opinion in Abbott v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 271, cited those cases and said:
“In the last two cases it was distinctly held, by a divided -court it is true, that ‘ a landowner has no right, by erecting an embankment, to stop the natural flow of surface water or to divert its course so as to throw it upon the land of his neighbor,’ thus discarding the old common-law rule on this subject, so long recognized and so often approved, and substituting therefor the rule of the ‘civil law.’ With all due respect for the acknowledged ability of the distinguished jurist who wrote those opinions, we feel constrained to recognize the common-law doctrine on this subject, so often and repeatedly ap*667 proved by this court, without division, in all its earlier and later decisions, as still the law in this State. The-rule of the common law, as expounded in the numerous decisions quoted above, we think, after all, best promotes and conserves the varied and important interests of both the public and private individuals incident to and growing out of this question. It permits and encourages public and private improvements, and at the same time restrains those engaged in such enterprises from unnecessarily or carelessly injuring another.”
Since then that rule of the common law has been observed as the law of this State. [Jones v. Railroad, 84 Mo. 151; Moss v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 86; Walther v. Cape Girardeau, 166 Mo. App. 467.]
III. At the time of the adoption of the common law in the Territory of Missouri in 1816, there was no decision of any court in England on the question as to whether, by such common law, the overflow water from rivers and streams 'was surface water. But in Rex v. Trafford, decided in 1831 in the Court of King’s Bench, and reported in 20 Eng. C. L. R. 498, and also reported in 1 B. & Ad. 874, Lord Tenderden, C. J., held that the overflow water of a stream was a part of the stream and that it could not be obstructed as surface water.
On writ _of error to the Court of Exchequer Chamber that case was reversed, but on other grounds, and the law as to overflow water as stated by Lord Tender-den was approved, 21 Eng. C. L. R. 272.
1 Kinney on Irrigation and Water Rights (2 Ed.), sec. 319, says:
• “By the common law, flood water overflowing the banks of a stream is a part of the stream, although not flowing in the channel. The decisions in this country are in hopeless conflict upon the subject, and cannot be reconciled, as those of cirtain states are diametrically opposed to those of others. Indiana, Missouri, Kansas and Washington treat the flood waters of the streams as sur*668 face waters, to be dealt with as such, according to the rule prevailing iji those states.”
McCormick v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 433; Kenney v. Railroad, 74 Mo. App. 301, and Schneider v. Railroad, 29 Mo. App. 68, are there cited as upholding the rule that such overflow water is surface water. That rule was also recognized in Abbott v. Railroad, 83 Mo. l. c. 280.
It is thus seen that, after our adoption of the common law, the new question arose both in England and in Missouri as to whether overflow water is surface water. The English courts answered it in the negative, while the courts of this State have, in four cases, taken the opposite position. We feel a degree of confidence in suggesting that as the rule of the English courts may be the best as applied to the streams and fields of that country, so the opposite rule as followed in this State is more in harmony with the needs of our situation. In the absence of a good reason for a change, law, like water, should be kept as near as possible within its old and well defined channels, and we shall hold fast to our rule that overflow water in Missouri, is surface water.
IV. As any landowner or person in possession of land has the right at common law, as construed in this State, to shut overflow or surface water off his laud, so, by such law, the defendant has the right to shut the overflow water of the river from its right of way provided it does not interfere with the river channel. There is no claim here that there is any interference with the river channel.
V. It remains to be considered whether the defendant is liable under section 3150 of our Revised Statutes. We will presume, without deciding, that a person owning land not adjoining defendant’s right of way may sue under such section. However, we cannot overlook the fact that the river runs between the railroad and plaintiff’s land. The section of the statute under consideration very clearly shows a purpose- to get rid of the surface water and the water of streams which would be obstructed by the roadbed, and prevented from running
The judgment is affirmed.
The foregoing opinion of Roy, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.