It is well settled in this State that the upper proprietor has no right to collect the water and divert it from its natural flow and discharge it upon the land of the lower proprietor.
Jenkins v. R. R.,
The plaintiff contends that it was not intended by that litigation to give the defendant therein an easement to maintain the wall nor to exempt the defendant from liability for this subsequent washing out of new holes and carrying away the soil by the freshet of 1919, or from all *419 subsequent freshets in wbicb tbe impeding of tbe natural flow of tbe water by tbe defendant’s dam could cause injury to tbe plaintiff’s property. By reference to tbe judgment by default granted by Judge Justice at March Term, 1917, it was adjudged that “tbe defendant wrongfully and unlawfully permitted tbe dam bolding said water to break and caused'tbe water to pour over tbe plaintiff’s land and damage tbe same by washing tbe soil and other parts of said land away and making boles therein.” At July Term, 1918, tbe inquiry was instituted before Judge Long, and tbe issue submitted as above stated, “What damages is tbe plaintiff entitled to recover, permanent or otherwise, against tbe defendant for and on account of tbe maintenance of tbe dam, as alleged in tbe complaint ?”
It is apparent from this that tbe damages alleged in tbe complaint as aforesaid were as recited in tbe judgment by default that tbe defendant bad “wrongfully and unlawfully diverted tbe water from Carraway Creek, and wrongfully and unlawfully permitted tbe dam bolding said' water to break and cause tbe water to pour over tbe plaintiff’s land and damage tbe same by washing tbe soil and other parts of said land away and make boles therein.” Tbe damagés sought in that action were tbe permanent damages for washing away tbe soil and making tbe boles by tbe freshet of 1913 and cannot reasonably be construed to have been tbe permanent damages to tbe plaintiff’s land by reason of its depreciation wbicb was given if tbe judgment gave a permanent easement.
In short, the judgment of July, 1918, obtained upon the default judgment of 1917, was for the damages, permanent or otherwise, caused by the unlawful diversion of the water making boles and otherwise washing away the soil on the plaintiff’s land. It did not create a permanent easement-in favor of the defendant to maintain the dam and thereby forever possess the right to divert the water making other boles and washing off the soil of the plaintiff’s land for all time to come.
It was stated on the argument here, and not denied, that the plaintiffs’ land was worth from $200 to $300 an acre, and it is not reasonable to suppose that $500 was intended to cover the damages wbicb would be sustained thereafter by the maintenance of the dam in future, especially when the cause of action in the former suit was for the diversion of the water by the dam and the failure to maintain it in good condition whereby breaches were made and the plaintiffs’ land injured thereby in the manner stated.
Tbe facts of this case are very similar to those in
Clark v. Guano Co.,
In
Ridley v. R. R.,
The assessment of permanent damages was made imperative by the statute, now C. S., 440, subsec. 2, but as to railroads only.
Barclift v. R. R.,
In the case at bar the damages obtained in the judgment by default in 1917, and the amount ascertained upon the inquiry in the trial in 1918, were not of such nature. They were not for the erection of a dam and injury sustained by the diversion of water caused thereby, for there, was-none alleged or shown, but the damages recovered were for failure to maintain the dam whereby through the breaches made therein the water had gouged out holes and -washed away some of the surface soil. This-cause of action was, in the language of the decision in Webb v. Chemical Co., supra, “not permanent in its nature, nor would continue to be productive of injury independent of any subsequent wrongful act.”
The defendant, therefore, did not obtain, by reason of the former judgment, any easement to maintain the dam.
The defendant in that case could not have had permanent damages assessed as a matter of right and upon the pleading and the judgment it *421 is clear tbat no damages were assessed by reason of tbe erection of tbe dam itself, and tbe defendant bas not acquired an easement to maintain sucb dam.
In addition, as already stated, only one of tbe tenants in common was a party to tbe former action. There was error in bolding tbat tbe former action was an estoppel in tbis action for tbe damages sustained by tbe fresbet of 1919, and there must be a
New trial.
