64 Vt. 491 | Vt. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action in case for obstructing a broolc or stream of water. When the plaintiffs rested, the court, on motion, directed a verdict for the defendant.
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that certain springs in the hillside in their land ran down and formed a small pond near the highway and thence the water made its way through a ravine and spread out upon the meadow below; that in the year 1852, for the purpose of forming a channel for the water and of draining the land so they could drive upon-it, they turned a furrow through the ravine, terminating within ten or twelve feet of the line fence between their land and the defendant’s; that it was a deep furrow until near the lower end, when it was shallower and
The case must be governed by the law relative to watercourses, which is well settled.
Ve have seen no better definition of a watercourse than that given by Chancellor Williamson, 1 Beas. Ch. R. 280; (72 Am. Dec. 394): “A watercourse is a channel or canal for conveyance of water, particularly in t draining lands; it may be natural, as when it is made by the natural flow of the water, caused by the general superficies of the surrounding land from which the water is collected into one channel, or it may be artificial as in case of a ditch or other artificial means used to divert the water from its natural channel, or to carry it from low lands, from which it will not flow in consequence of the nataral-formation of the surface of the surrounding land.” Angelí on W. C. s. 4, says that a watercourse consists of bed, banks, and water, though the water need not flow continuously — that many watercourses are sometimes dry. There must be a distinct channel, the bed of the stream, with well defined banks, cut through the turf and into the soil
This stream, small as the evidence tended to show it was, and small as was its channel, clearly falls within the legal definition of a watercourse. Its beginning was at the point where it first received the percolating water of the ravine and sent it down towards the meadow in one course; its terminus was at the point where the furrow ran out and the water was discharged upon the meadow near the defendant’s land.
By reason of the nature or conformation of the soil, water sometimes leaves its channel, and after spreading over a wide space without apparent banks, flows a considerable distance and again takes a regular channel, yet it maintains its character as a watercourse. Macomber v. Godfrey, 108 Mass. 219; Gillett v. Johnson, 30 Conn. 180. But in this case none of the plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the water ever found a channel on the defendant’s land; on the contrary, it was lost in the soil near the division line. From the end of the ditch to the fence, a distance of ten or twelve feet, there was no channel; all the witnesses so testified. "Wm. Ilawley, one of the plaintiffs, was asked:
Q. “Why didn’t you run it clear down to the line fence?” A. “ I didn’t propose to throw all the water on to Mr. Sheldon. I didn’t run it there. I left it within ten feet — I don’t know just ten — ten or a dozen, and let it spread its natural course.”
In answer to the question : “ When it gets down to the end of the channel where does it go to,” he said : “It spreads off on both farms.” So it appears from his own testimony that it became mere surface water and w-as squandered when it reached the end of the ditch.
If this stream of water had continued in a defined channel upon and over the defendant’s land, he and the plaintiffs would have acquired correlative rights in relation to it. Each party
Judgment affirmed.