127 Iowa 529 | Iowa | 1905
The facts in this case are practically undisputed, and are briefly as follows: The defendants M. McOlurkin and J. A. Yenghause are the owners of farm lands in ther>southeast quarter of section 1, township 73, range 4, and the other defendants are the owners of farm lands either adjoining or near thereto. The. plaintiff Keck is the owner of the northeast quarter of section 32, township 74, range 3, and the plaintiffs Key and Williams own lands in sections 36 and 31 of’the same township and range. Otter creek is a creek of considerable size; one of its branches having its source about seven miles southwest of the McOlurkin land, and the other or west branch thereof having its source about six miles west of tire McOlurkin land. The two branches come together on the McOlurkin land, and the stream then flows northeast into a water course known as the “ County Ditch.” The creek is a natural water course, with a well-defined channel, which is from ten to fourteen feet deep, and from forty to fifty-five feet wide where it passes through section 1, township 73, range 4; and water flows there continuously and continues on through the county ditch into the Iowa river. The depth and width of the channel are about the same for a mile and a half or two miles down the stream from McClurkin’s, but from there it gradually shallows until it reaches Keck’s land, where it is only about 5 or 6 feet deep. In times of ordinary flood, and when Otter creek is running only bank-full, all of its water is discharged through its channel along the defendant’s lands, but when the channel there is bank-full the stream overflows on the plaintiff’s lands, because of the lower banks and slower current. In times of
The legal question thus presented for determination is an interesting one, and it is not. entirely free from doubt, either under our own decisions, or under the decisions of the courts generally. It may be stated thus: May a riparian proprietor embank against the natural overflow from an inland stream, when the effect may be to cast an increased volume of water upon the land of other proprietors, to their injury ? Reason and justice should answer the question in the negative, and we believe that the weight of authority has so answered it. The rights of riparian proprietors on both navigable and unnavigable streams are to a great extent mutual or common, and it is a fundamental rule that the use of that which is common to all must be reasonable. The riparian proprietor selects his location for the benefits which maJy come to him from the common use of the stream, and it is manifest that he should not be permitted to do any act relative thereto that
Tbe appellants further contend that, even if tbe law is found against them on the main proposition, tbe plaintiffs have not proved that they will suffer damage by reason of an increased flow of water down Otter creek, and base this contention on tbe undisputed evidence that tbe lower land is overflowed before tbe water overflows tbe banks through tbe McOlurkin land. Tbe trial court found against them on this proposition. It is undoubtedly true that a riparian owner may repel tbe water and cause it to flow in tbe channel of' the stream which it has left, if by doing so be inflicts no injury on his neighbor. If an injury to tbe lower land will as certainly occur without tbe embankment, because of tbe