225 P. 691 | Okla. | 1923
This action was brought by defendant in error, hereinafter called plaintiff, against the plaintiff in error, hereinafter called defendant. The action is for damages caused to plaintiff's crop and land by overflow caused by a railroad embankment which changed the natural course of water and caused the overflow of plaintiff's land. The defendant set up in its answer, among other things, a plea of res judicata, wherein it says that in a former suit by William McDaniel, the then owner of the title to said land, against Charles Schaff, the receiver of properties of the defendant railway company, said William McDaniel in his petition in that case alleged:
"That said railway company's line of railroad now operated by receiver as aforesaid, runs across the northwest quarter (N.W. 1/4) of the northwest quarter (N.W. 1/4) of section 17, T. 25 N., R. 15 E., of said land; that at a point about 400 yards north of the station at Tyrola, Oklahoma, on said line of road, defendant's line of railway crosses a natural water course as it enters said above described land and that through said land the roadbed is thrown up on a grade of from three to ten feet higher than the surrounding lands, and plaintiff avers that these conditions existed at and before the time said receiver was appointed and have continued to exist since that time and that both the railway company and receiver are and were well aware of said conditions and that each has wholly failed and refused to undertake to remedy same or to establish or maintain proper opening for the outlet of surface and other water falling on and flowing over and across the above described lands and that they have caused to be filled up the natural water courses across said lands causing the surface waters and other waters to be deflected from their natural and usual courses and to flow over plaintiff's said lands covering same at places *107 to a depth of from ten to fifteen feet in sand and totally destroying all of the plaintiff's said above described lands situated in said sections 8 and 17, T. 5 N., R. 6 E., and plaintiff avers that his damages and the cause thereof are not abatable by the expenditure of money or labor or both, but are permanent and that all of his above described lands have therefore now been totally destroyed and he is now entitled to recover in this one action, for the total destruction thereof and that the reasonable fair market value of said lands is $1,000."
That a trial was had in said cause on the 22nd day of December, 1917, and the following judgment entered:
"Now on this 22nd day of December, 1917, the same being one of the judicial days of the regular October, 1917, term of this court, comes on for trial the above entitled cause and by agreement of the parties a jury is waived and the cause is submitted to the court for the final trial and determination and the court having seen the pleadings and heard the evidence and the argument of counsel and being fully advised in the premises doth find that the defendants are liable to the plaintiff as set out in his petition and plaintiff's damages and the cause thereof are not abatable by the expenditure of labor or money but are permanent and that plaintiff's lands described as follows: (Here follows description of lands) have been totally destroyed and the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this action the full value thereof and that defendants are liable to plaintiff in the sum of $300, and costs.
"Wherefore, it is considered, ordered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiff have and recover of and from the defendants the sum of $300, and all costs herein laid out and expended."
The defendant contends that the judgment in that case, being for the full value of said land, is a bar to this action, and that neither the plaintiff in that suit nor his successor in title can maintain any other suit for damages to said land. Counsel states his proposition as follows:
"The judgment rendered in favor of the previous owner, plaintiff's grantor, is res judicata that the damages and the cause thereof were original and permanent, and is conclusive as to any damages subsequently suffered, by plaintiff, and the trial court erred in submitting the case to the jury, and in admitting certain immaterial evidence, in giving certain instructions to the jury, and in refusing to give defendant's requested instructions."
This proposition and argument thereunder are grouped under specifications of error from 1 to 22. It will be seen that William McDaniel, while still the owner of the fee, had brought suit against the railroad for a permanent injury to the land by overflow alleged to have been caused by the railroad's failure to establish or maintain proper opening through its embankment on which its road was constructed; and further alleged that the damage and cause thereof were permanent, and were not abateable by the expenditure of money or labor or both. After the judgment was obtained in this case, which is above set out, and sometime before the commencement of this suit, William McDaniel sold the premises to the plaintiff, J.M. Bevel, and sometime after Bevel became the owner of the land, a heavy rain occurred, and the land was again overflowed, being the same land that was overflowed prior to the time McDaniel brought his suit in which he alleged that the property was totally destroyed, and that the cause was not abatable by labor or money and asked for a judgment for the value of the land. The question presented under this head is whether Bevel, as successor in title, can maintain this suit for damages to his crop when the same had been finally adjudicated in the case brought by William McDaniel, who recovered the full value of the land according to the judgment entered. This question has been before this court a number of times, and in the case of Chicago, R.I. P. Ry. Co. v. Davis,
"Where a wrong is of a permanent nature and continuous, springing from the manner in which the ditch or channel is completed, on account of the diversion of surface water, the land of the abutting proprietor necessarily being injured by such diverted water, such proprietor may treat the act of the railway company as a permanent injury and recover his damages in the consequent depreciation of the value of his property, and in such case the recovery of the damage results in a consent on the part of such propprietor to such manner of maintaining such ditch or channel, concluding both him and any subsequent owner of such land."
This case was followed by this court in the case of City of Ardmore v. Orr,
"If the damages (suffered) by plaintiff are permanent, then the measure thereof is the value of the property destroyed, or the depreciation in the value of the property injured. * * *
"If it is permanent, then the injured party may recover in one action all damages he has or may sustain as a result of the negligent construction of the improvements complained of; but if it is not permanent, then he may recover only such damages as he *108 has sustained up to the time of the institution of his action."
In the case of St. Louis S. F. Ry. Co. v. Stephenson,
"While the rule is well established that there may be as many successive recoveries as there are successive injuries caused by a permanent structure, when its construction and continuance are not in themselves necessarily injurious, yet, where the pleadings and evidence, as in the instant case, show conclusively that the permanent character of a railroad embankment, and its continuance as originally constructed, necessarily produced the injury to the freehold and caused the depreciation in the value thereof complained of at the time of construction, and that such injury had wholly occurred when plaintiff acquired the land, it must be held that she took it in its then known condition."
Under the foregoing decisions, the court holds that where the suit is for the total destruction of the property, and the judgment is rendered for the full value of the property, and said judgment is satisfied by payment thereof to the plaintiff, such judgment is a bar to any further action for damages to the same land. The rule announced in the foregoing case is sustained by the cases of Hubbard v. Spring River Power Company (Kan.) 131 P. 1183; Vanderslice v. Irondale Electric Light, Heat Power Co.,
In the case of Hubbard v. Spring River Power Co., supra, the Supreme Court of Kansas announced the rule as follows:
"Where lands are subject to overflow by reason of the erection and maintenance of a dam permanent in character, the owner who has not been compensated for the appropriation of his lands may, if he sees fit, maintain an action to recover all damages occasioned to the lands present and prospective, and such cause of action accrues at the time of the appropriation. The owner of lands adjacent to a dam erected as a permanent structure sued to recover damages to the lands by reason of their being subject to overflow. The answer set up the record and proceedings in a former action between the same parties, wherein the plaintiff recovered damages to the land caused by the erection and maintenance of the dam. Held, that the facts pleaded constitute a good defense of res judicata, and that a demurrer to the answer was rightly overruled."
In 22 Ruling Case Law, sec. 144, page 899, the rule is laid down thus:
"Where the injury results from a cause which is either permanent in its character, or is treated as permanent by the parties, all the damages, whether past, present, or prospective may and should be recovered in a single action, and the judgment in one such action is a bar to another like action between the same parties for the same cause.
"If a private nuisance is of such a character that its continuance is necessarily an injury, and it is of a permanent character, that will continue without change from any cause but human labor, and dependent for change on no contingency of which the law can take notice, then the damages are original, and according to the weight of authority a right of action at once exists to recover the entire damage, past, and future, and one recovery will be a bar to any subsequent action."
In the case of Vanderslice v. Irondale Electric Light, Heat Power Co., supra, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania says:
"There is no rule of law which will permit one man to take possession of anothers property, and then force him to accept damages in lieu of his right to recover the possession of it. He cannot compel him to part with his property even for a full price; McCoy v. Danley,
"Welliver offered no proof of loss of his crops, or the cost of restoring his system of underdrains, nor of the cost of draining off the water which was then upon his fields, but he treated the race as a fixture, and the percolation through its banks and the flooding of his land of a nature that would continue for all time to come, and by proving the cost of the prevention of the flooding to exceed the market value of his land he thereby established the market value as the measure of his damages.
"Had the defendant preferred to reconstruct its raceway so as to prevent future percolation rather than to pay damages for a permanent injury to the plaintiff's land, it could have objected to his evidence of the cost of prevention, driven him to proof of the cost of restoration alone and thus limited his recovery to damages which has accrued prior to the trial: Aldworth v. Lynn,
"In this action the word 'permanent' does not appear in the declaration, and the proof went to the loss of the crops or injury to the use and occupation of the same land since the former trial. No change was shown in the condition of the raceway, nor increase in the seepage therefrom; and, while the water had risen a little higher on plaintiff's land, no more of it was flooded. We are accordingly of the opinion that the defendant's second point ought to have been affirmed, and the plaintiff should not have been permitted to recover compensatory damages, because his predecessor in title elected to treat the seepage as permanent in character and had already recovered at the hands of the defendant all compensation for past and future injuries to his flooded lands. It follows that exemplary damages should not have been allowed, for the defendant had done the plaintiff no wrong."
The case of C. B. Q. Ry. Co. v. Schaffer, supra, cited in the Pennsylvania Case, just quoted, is a strong case and supports that case in every particular and we would quote from it but we must abridge our quotations.
The above citations and rule quoted from a number of the decisions is sufficient to establish the rule in this class of cases. Counsel for defendant in error contends that the question involved in this action was not decided in the former suit and that it was not former adjudication. He has taken up the cases cited by plaintiff in error and commented on them, and cites a number of cases in which he thinks a distinction is made between the rule laid down in the cases cited by plaintiff in error, and among the cases he cited, we refer to the following cases: Platt v. Ratcliff,
"The court will bear in mind that the amount of land described iu the petition and the judgment is 160 acres, and in that case the court found that the land was totally destroyed and that the value of the 160 acres of land was $300 — remarkable, inconsistent, unnatural, inequitable, unjudicious, a fallacy and fraud upon Bill McDaniel — and going out of the record we do not hesitate to say that we do not believe that to this day Wm. McDaniel in that suit had knowledge of, or has yet knowledge of, what that judgment purports to determine"
— because, he said, that within 12 months from the date of the rendition of that judgment McDaniel sold the land to plaintiff Bevel for $7,300. That might be good argument, if counsel was attacking the judgment for fraud or mistake, but no action has ever been brought to set aside that judgment upon any grounds, and the same stands as a finality, and has been satisfied, and however which one may think that the plaintiff in that case did not know what the judgment contained, it was the duty of plaintiff to know and it was the duty of his counsel to know and advise him just what the judgment was. It is too late now to complain of the judgment rendered in that case, and it is noticeable from the record, that the same judge who rendered the judgment in the McDaniel Case on the 22nd day of December, 1917, also rendered the judgment in this case. It will be observed from a comparison of the description of the land in each case, that the same is identical. So we have the same subject-matter, the same claim for injury. The only difference being in the name of the parties plaintiff, but the authorities above cited hold that the successor in title stands in the same position as his grantor. He has no greater or less right than his grantor. If his grantor is barred by the former judgment, he took the land with that burden on it and must stand the consequences.. We are of the opinion that the former case is a complete bar to this action; that the judgment in the former case is res judicata herein, and that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed and the case remanded, with directions to dismiss the same. There are other errors assigned and argued but under our view of the case they need not be passed on. Let the case be reversed, with direction to dismiss the case.
By the Court: It is so ordered.