112 Mo. 6 | Mo. | 1892
This is an action to recover damages for overflowing some four thousand acres of land owned by plaintiff, thereby destroying his crops in the years 1881, 1882 and 1883, and at the same time permanently., injuring his lands. There is a separate count for 'the damages to the crops in each year, and for the permanent injuries to the land.
The petition avers and the proof shows that the acts complained of were done at different dates and by different railroad companies; but as these companies were consolidated from time to time, forming the present defendant, we shall treat the defendant as liable for the acts of its constituents. Disregarding these acts of consolidation the substantial averments of the petition are, that the defendant in 1868 built a dam across the Nishnabotna river at one point, and in 1880 carelessly and negligently constructed a bridge over the same river at another point, by reason of all which the waters of that river were thrown back upon the plaintiff’s land at ordinary high stages of water and
The bridge and dam are in the county of Atchison in this state, the former a mile and one-half and the latter two miles south of the state line. The plaintiff’s lands lie in the adjoining county of Fremont in the state of Iowa, and are from five to twelve miles north and northwest of the dam and bridge. The railroad runs over the bottom lands on the east side of the Missouri river. It passes over the dam and bridge and thence on in a northwest direction for a distance of four miles to a point near to, but west of, Hamburg in Iowa, thence in a more westerly direction for some three miles where there is, trestle work over a slough, and thence on to the northwest. The plaintiff’s lands are situate on both sides of the railroad, north and south of this slough. The Nishnabotna river, hereafter called the Nishna, flows from the interior of Iowa in a southwesterly direction to a point just east of Hamburg, thence in a more southerly course to the bridge. Willow creek flows in a southeasterly direction, east of the railroad, to a point near Hamburg where it empties into the Nishna, so that the waters of these streams join before they reach the bridge. Prior to 1860 the Nishna, .after passing the place where the bridge was subsequently erected, made a curve to the south and then back to the east, passing over the place where the dam was built, thus forming a. loop out west towards the Missouri river. It then ran on in a southeasterly direction for a distance of fifty or sixty miles by its meanderings before it entered the Missouri. In 1863, according to most of the witnesses, the Missouri worked its way east so as to cut into the Nishna at the loop before mentioned. Thereafter the Nishna discharged
In 1867 the Missouri made what is called the Peru cut-off, that is to say, it cut out for itself a new channel some five miles west of this place where it had before cut into the Nishna at the loop. After this the Nishna continued to flow down through this old Missouri river channel for a distance of some five miles to the Missouri. In times of usual high waters, either in the Nishna or Missouri, some of the overflow waters passed down the old Nishna channel, but at low water the inlet to that channel was dry land. With this state of affairs the railroad was constructed in 1868 along the east side of the old Missouri river channel through which the Nishna waters then flowed. The dam was made, not across this channel, but across the old Nishna bed, and a bridge was built across the Nishna a half mile to the north where the railroad crossed the river.
There is a question of fact as to whether the fill or dam was made by the railroad company or by the county of Atchison. The evidence on this issue is in substance this: Some of the plaintiff’s witnesses speak of the fill as having been made by the railroad contractors. On the other hand the defendant put in evidence an act of the legislature, approved the nineteenth of March, 1868, the first section of which is in these words:
“That the county court of Atchison county be and is hereby authorized to build, or cause to be built, a. dam across the Nishnabotna river in said county, at or near the point where the line of the Council Bluffs & St. Joseph railroad crosses said river below a point in said river heretofore known as ‘the narrows.’ ”
After the dam had been completed the old Missouri channel, through which the bulk of the Nishna waters flowed, began to fill up, so that in time the low water line of the Nishna became higher and higher, and in 1879 or 1880 the overflows of that river threatened injury. In view of this fact the county of Atchison built a dyke in 1880 from the south end of the railroad bridge east to the bluffs.
Though there is some conflict in the evidence, the weight of it seems to be that the plaintiff’s lands were overflowed in 1880 by high waters from the Missouri. One witness says the Missouri extended from the bluffs on the Nebraska side to the bluffs on the Missouri side. As to the years 1882 and 1883 the evidence tends to show that the Missouri river was high, and that the Nishna was at the same time higher than it had ever before been known to rise. The waters from the Nishna were several feet deep all over the lands between the dyke on the south, the railroad embankment on the west, and the bluffs back of Hamburg on the east. They backed up Willow creek and ran out at the slough and trestle work before mentioned, and destroyed the plaintiff’s
The present railroad bridge was built, as we understand, after the. road had been in operation, but prior to the flood of 1881. There is' some evidence tending to show that it is not long enough to accommodate a free passage of the water at high stages, and that some obstructions were left in the channel. The defendant’s evidence tends to show that these alleged obstructions were below low water line when the bridge was built, that the bridge consisted of two spans one hundred feet each, while the river just above was only one hundred and twenty five feet between its banks at the widest place, that the bridge was long enough for all ordinary high stages of water, and that its failure to discharge the waters at the time in question was due to unprecedented high waters in the Nishna, the Atchison county dyke, and the '.filling up of the old Missouri channel from natural causes.
That cannot be a nuisance so as to give a common-law right of action, which the law authorizes. To the extent which a person has a right to act, others must suffer. These propositions have been laid down by high authority, and are not questioned; but they are based upon the assumption that the act of the legislature which authorizes the thing to be done is a valid law. If it violates the constitution it is not a valid law, and of course constitutes no justification for the acts done thereunder.
The act of the legislature in question is to be tested, not by the present constitution, but by the provision in force when the act was passed, which provided that private property ought not to be taken or appropriated to public use without just compensation. This act does not provide for the payment of damages to persons whose property may be injured by the dam, and the question is whether the act and work done thereunder amount to a ‘taking” within the meaning of the constitution.
The books are full of cases which show that many acts done under legislative sanction, which are injurious to others, do not amount to a taking of private property; and this, too, though the same acts would be actionable at the suit of the persons injured, if not done under legislative authority. It is generally held that acts done by virtue of statute law, which do not directly encroach upon the property of an individual or disturb him in his possession or enjoyment, will not entitle him to compensation, or give him a right of action. Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations [6 Ed.] 666; Trans. Co. v. Chicago, 99 U. S. 635; Bellinger v. Railroad, 23 N. Y. 42. Where a city grades a street under
We now notice some of the cases mostly relied upon by the plaintiff: In Eaton v. Railroad, 51 N. H. 504, the plaintiff owned meadow land which, was protected from the overflows of a river by a ridge of land. The defendant, in constructing its road, made a cut through the ridge. The waters of the river flowed through this cut in ordinary freshets on and over the meadow. The court held the defendant liable in an action on the case. The principle of liability, it was said, must be the same whether the owner is wholly or only partially deprived of the use of his land; that taking a part is as much forbidden as taking the whole; that the quantum of interest may vary, but the principle remains the same. It is also there said that to turn a stream of water on the plaintiff’s premises is as much an infringement of his property rights as it would be for one to go upon the premises in person and dig a ditch, or deposit upon them a mound of earth. .
In McKenzie v. Boom Co., 29 Minn. 288, defendant erected a boom across a navigable stream in accord
Rooking at the mass of evidence, the substance of which has been stated, it will be seen that the Nishna river had two channels from a point just below the railroad bridge. The old Missouri channel constituted the main and principal one, down which water flowed at all times. The old Nishna bed, branching off to the east, constituted the other one. It served as a* waste-way during high waters, but had defined banks into which the water collected and ran off, so that it must be treated as a stream. The dam across this waste-way left the main channel untouched. That channel was a good and sufficient outlet at all ordinary high stages of water and continued to be such for a period of ten or more years. In process of time it filled up from natural causes, thereby obstructing the passage of the water from above. If the dam can be said to have had any real agency in producing the damages complained of, it was because of its presence after this process of filling up had taken place. The dam was rather a condition than the real and direct cause of the injury. It was the intervening filling up of the main channel from natural causes which caused the dam to aid in the overflows of 1881, 1882 and 1883. We do not see how such injuries can be said to proceed immediately from the dam. The
We have found and been cited to no case, the facts of which will say that there was here a taking of private property for public use. The facts as they existed when and immediately after the dam was constructed would have laid no foundation whatever for the allowance of damages had the act provided for paying damages to all persons who might be injured by the dam. Nor does the evidence in this case lay the foundation for an action for the maintenance of a nuisance, unless it was the duty of the defendant to keep the main natural channel open and free of obstructions. Where a railroad builds a culvert or other passage way under its road, it is bound to keep the same open for the free passage of water (36 N. Y. 214), but that is not the case here. Here there was a good and sufficient natural channel, not touched by the dam, and this being so the state had a right to authorize the county to fill up the old one. The damages sued for were caused by one of those changes which take place in the channel of the Missouri river and its tributaries, which are to be laid to the account of Providence and not to the hand of man. The court did not err in its rulings on this branch of the case.
The plaintiff’s ninth instruction defined the measure of damages as to the fourth count, and his tenth
The verdict for $1 may be accounted for on the ground that the jury believed the bridge was wide enough for all ordinary high stages of water, but that there was some little negligence in failing to properly clean out the channel under it when constructed but that these obstructions had very little to do with the overflows. There is an abundance of evidence, to support such a finding. We discover no error in the record and the iudgment is affirmed.