92 Wash. 153 | Wash. | 1916
The plaintiffs are the owners of forty acres of land in Island county, described as the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 23, in township 33, north, range 1, east of the Willamette Meridian. The
Before the construction of the ditches, when the waters accumulated in the center marsh sufficient to overflow a barrier of about a foot and a half in height, they flowed through a depression in the surface till they reached about the center of the Adams’ forty, when they deflected more sharply to the northwest, and were cast by the natural course of drainage across the northeast corner of the plaintiffs’ land. When the defendants constructed their ditch from the center marsh, they followed the natural course of drainage as far as the center of the Adams’ forty, and there turned the ditch directly west, casting the waters against the lands of the plaintiffs at a point some five hundred feet south of
In 1914, the defendants constructed another ditch from the south marsh which led to a point where its waters were so cast as to flow upon the southern portion of the plaintiffs’ land, increasing the dampness of the soil on that portion. The water in this ditch began to flow about January 1, 1915, but at the time of the trial this ditch had been plugged up and no water was escaping therefrom. This ditch did not follow the natural course of drainage, and was in fact cut through a barrier of cement gravel.
The plaintiffs brought this action to enjoin the maintenance of the ditches, and to recover damages claimed to have been suffered by their maintenance. Mrs. Adams, the present owner of the land upon which was constructed the ditch draining the center marsh, was not made a party defendant. The court, in giving judgment, ignored the question of dam
The first contention of the defendants is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, but we think that all the objections urged by them have been met by the proofs offered on the trial, and we will deem the complaint amended to conform to such- proofs.
The next contention is that the judgment of the superior court is contrary to the evidence. This is based largely on the fact that the ditch which causes the damage is not located on land belonging tó the defendants, but is upon land intervening between the lands of the parties, whose title and possession rests in a third person. But the evidence shows that defendants were the owners of this intermediate land at the time the ditch was constructed, and that they still make use of the ditch for the purpose of draining the marsh waters. Their act of turning the waters from the marshes into the ditch is the efficient cause of the injury to the land of plaintiffs, and since the injury is a continuing one, it is a subject for injunctive relief. The principles governing the case have already been enunciated by this court. Cases presenting almost parallel facts will be found in Noyes v. Cosselman, 29 Wash. 635, 70 Pac. 61, 92 Am. St. 937, and Sullivan v. Johnson, 30 Wash. 72, 70 Pac. 246. In the second of these cases, the rule is stated as follows:
“Where surface waters are confined by natural barriers so that the same do not run from such confinement naturally, the upper proprietor may not construct a ditch so as to Cast such waters upon his neighbor, to the material injury of such neighbor.”
“When surface water is collected and discharged upon adjoining lands in quantities greater than, or in a manner different from, the natural flow, a liability accrues for the injury occasioned thereby. Injunction is held to be a proper remedy where the injury is a continually recurring one, and cannot be compensated in damages.”
This last citation disposes of defendants’ contention that plaintiffs should be relegated to an action for damages because the ditch has been completed and is no longer a threatened injury, as it is plain that the injury involved in the instant case is a recurring one and as such subject to restraint by injunction.
The plaintiffs contend that the decree does not go far enough, because it does not restrain the drainage from the north and south marshes into the center marsh. Inasmuch as the casting of these surface waters upon any other part of their land than where they were accustomed to flow by natural drainage was enjoined, they can suffer no injury by this act, since the evidence does not disclose that the volume of water passing over their land in the natural course of drainage has been increased by the junction of the three marshes. The waters of the south marsh, in case of heavy rains raising their level, found their natural outlet into the center marsh before the construction of the ditch between them. True, the effect of the ditch was to allow it to drain at a lower level than it did formerly, but there is no proof of a resultant injury. Moreover, the trial court in dismissing this branch of the case, conceded plaintiffs the right of another action should subsequent events show a resultant damage.
The plaintiffs further contend that the court should have required defendants to fill the ditch on the Adams’ land from the point where it departs from the natural depression of the ground, but it is sufficient answer to this to say that the
The judgment is affirmed.