14 La. 161 | La. | 1839
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff seeks to recover damages, alleging that by defendant’s illegal acts and omissions he has brought together and concentrated all the waters of his plantation in a certain pool or pond, not a common drain, lying and extending on both their premises; that afterwards he has, by cutting through a causeway on his (plaintiff’s) plantation, let into his field of cotton such a body of wateras has overflowed it, and rendered all cultivation impossible. , The defendant denies that he has done any injury to plaintiff, and' claims damages in reconvention, averring that plaintiff has illegally erected a levee or embankment on his land, and done other acts, whereby the natural flow1 of his waters has been obstructed, and his (defendant’s) land covered with water. This case has been before two juries who,brought in verdicts for the plaintiff, and judgment having been entered upon the last verdict, the defendant appealed.
The parties are owners of adjacent tracts of land fronting the Mississippi, and extending back to Lake Concordia, on which they also have a front. From.both fronts there is a slope or descent towards a certain bayou, situated some way between, but nearer the lake. It is admitted that plaintiff’s -tract is situated below that of defendant,‘and must receive the waters which naturally flow from it; but plaintiff con
It ■ is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the . . judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.