Lead Opinion
Section 19 of Article I of the Ohio Constitution-provides that:
“Private property shall ever be held inviolate, but subservient to the public welfare. When taken in time of war*336 or other public exigency, imperatively requiring its immediate seizure or for the purpose of making or repairing roads, which shall be open to the public, without charge, a compensation shall be made to the owner, in money, and in all other cases, where private property shall be taken for public use, a compensation therefor shall first be made in money, or first secured by a deposit of money; and such compensation shall be assessed by a jury, without deduction for benefits to any property of the owner.”
This court has held that “ [a]ny direct encroachment upon , land, which subjects it to a public use that excludes or restricts the dominion and control of the owner over it, is a ‘taking’ ” in the constitutional sense. Lake Erie & Western Rd. Co. v. Commrs. of Hancock County (1900),
The city maintains, nonetheless, that it is not-liable for appropriating the plaintiffs’ property because it has a right as añ upstream riparian proprietor to collect surface water from a watershed area within its corporate lim
Other Ohio cases have generally held or assumed that an upper landowner may be liable to a lower, if the former's use of his property is unreasonable under the circumstances and such use causes material damage by flooding the latter’s property. Spicer v. White Bros. Builders (1962),
The leading Ohio case on the riparian rights of municipal corporations is Canton v. Shock (1902),
That case did not involve the issue of appropriation, nor the issues of acceleration of flow or flooding. But the basic principle that the city must exercise its rights reasonably, ánd so as to cause as little injury to others as circumstances will permit, has been applied in cases analogous to the present one. In Piqua v. Morris (1918), 98 Ohio St.
“In the construction and maintenance of a hydraulic, or similar work, a municipality, or other owner, is required to use ordinary skill and foresight to prevent injury to others in times of floods to be reasonably anticipated; and if injury is caused by the negligence of such owner, he is liable in damages, provided his negligence is one of the proximate causes of the injury, although it concurred with other causes, including the act of God.”
In Barberton v. Miksch, supra (
“Casting water upon the land of another by seepage or percolation resulting from the construction and maintenance of a reservoir by a municipality as a part of its system for supplying water to its inhabitants, constitutes a trespass.”
In Lucas v. Carney, supra (
“Where, in creating a public improvement upon land which it owns, a county without negligence or malice but solely as a result of the creation of such improvement physically encroaches upon the land and property of another owner and deprives that owner of any of the use and enjoyment of his property, such encroachment is a taking pro tanto of the property so encroached upon, for which the county is liable, and the owner of such property is entitled to institute an action and have a jury impaneled to determine the compensation due him from the county for the appropriation pro tanto of his property.”
In so holding, this court impliedly rejected the common-enemy doctrine of surface water drainage as applied to public improvements in urban areas.
The above eases establish that a municipality, in con
It would be anomalous indeed to hold that a municipality may plan and build a storm sewer system to collect surface water and channel it into a natural watercourse, with knowledge that the watercourse is insufficient to accommodate the flow during rains which can be reasonably anticipated, and thereby cause continual flooding of lower land, without compensation to the owner, despite the mun-cipality’s liability for causing surface water to flood the property directly, and its liability for failure to use reasonable eare in its construction of a hydraulic system in order to prevent injury to others in times of flooding. This anomaly is particularly apparent where, as here, a different design would have averted the flooding. The correct principle of these cases is that a municipal corporation may make reasonable use of a natural watercourse to drain surface water, and will not be liable for incidental damages which may be considered dammum absque injuria. It is also not liable for increased flow caused simply by improvement- of lots and streets (Hamilton v. Ashbrook [1900],
But, where a municipality constructs a public improvement, such as a storm sewer system, and thereby effectively takes private property for its own use by casting surface waters upon that property, it must pay compensation for the property taken under Section 19 of the Ohio Bill of Rights. Such a case falls directly within the language of paragraph one of the syllabus of Norwood v. Sheen, supra (
“Any direct encroachment upon land, which subjects it to a public use that excludes or restricts the dominion and control of the owner over it, is a taking of his property, for which he is guaranteed a right of compensation by Section 19 of the Bill of Rights. ’ ’
A clear principle of justice requires that the taking of property for the public benefit go hand-in-hand with compensation for the property taken. A similar result has been reached in other states which have considered this question. Houston v. Wall (Texas Civ. App. 1947),
The judgment of the Court of Appeals, reversing the dismissal of the complaints and remanding the cause to the Court of Common Pleas for further proceedings, is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part. ’I would1 hold that in operating its storm sewer .system, the city was engaged in the performance of a proprietary function and was liable in damages for negligence. I do not agree that there was a constructive appropriation of appellees’ property.
