175 Mo. App. 327 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
Plaintiff’s action was instituted to recover damages for destruction of his matured corn crop in 1911 alleged to have been caused by defendants building a dam across a watercourse known as Sugar Creek and diverting the flow of water onto plaintiff’s land situated south of the point of obstruction. The judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.
There was evidence to show that defendants first built the levee now in question across a portion of their land down to the north ^side of the creek, and then crossed over and extended it south quite a distance from the south hank, thus leaving the creek open between the two ends of the levee. They then dug a ditch six feet wide and three feet deep a little east of that part of the levee which was south of the creek. Then on the night of November 19, 1910, they constructed a dam across the creek by placing a large log across from bank to hank as a brace to boards, straw and dirt which they put in. At this time the creek was running a stream three feet deep and of varying width which was'thus turned into the ditch and started on its course towards and upon plaintiff’s land.
Counsel ask, if a man awakens some morning to find a levee broken which has protected his lands from the overflow of a stream, shall he not have a right to set to and restore it? And that if wrongfully temporarily enjoined from doing so, has he not the right otherwise to protect himself? If we answer both these questions in the affirmative, it will not determine the plaintiff’s case adversely. If defendants had a right
This brings us to the legal question involved. Defendants’ case is really made to depend upon whether it is necessary that the new stream (if we may so call it) should have followed its course for ten years so that there would be a prescriptive right. We think not. We considered that question in Brill v. Railroad, 161 Mo. App. 472, and decided that if an artificial stream exists and is substituted for, or has taken the place of the natural one, it should not be obstructed. We quoted in that case the following from Babbitt v. Safety Fund Nat. Bank, 169 Mass. 361: “Although the watercourse was artificially constructed, it may be rightfully located and maintained. . . . Everybody whose property was liable to be affected by setting back the water had a right to exemption from disturbance by an interference with its flow. It is immaterial whether the plaintiff had acquired rights by prescription. The liability of the defendant in reference to obstructions caused by it which would naturally injure the plaintiff’s property was the same as it would
The change of the course of Sugar Creek southwest into Little Sugar Lake was .through well-defined banks which had existed for several years; the waters of the stream, as we have already said, were three feet deep and were there stated to be wide enough for the use of row boats thereon. The court and jury could well consider that it had become substituted for the old stream. It abundantly filled the definition of a watercourse as found in' Benson v. Railway Company, 78 Mo. 504, 514 ; Webb v. Carter, 121 Mo. App. 147, ahd the recent case of Scott v. Railway Co., 158 Mo. App. 625.
A number of objections are made to plaintiff Vinstructions. Taken together we think them not subject to substantial criticism. The one on the measure of damages could not have been misunderstood by a jury of ordinary intelligence and defendants seem not to have asked any on that subject. Nor do we think instruction No. 7, connected with the others could have wrongfully affected defendants. The information given the jury as to what would constitute a watercourse was plain and proper. In fact, taking the case as the face of the record practically shows it, plaintiff was bound to prevail.
What we have said really covers defendants’ objections to the court’s disallowance of defendants’ offer to file an amended answer. Besides the offer to file it was ill-timed which fully justified the court in exercising its discretion against the request.
It is said there was not sufficient evidence to connect defendant A. B. Woolston with acts charged by plaintiff. We think record shows there is.
We do not consider defendants have any ground, of complaint at the remarks of the court in the progress of the trial. They were proper statements in the course of his rulings which, as we have seen, covered