The plaintiff landowner sued the Big Tarkio Drainage District for money damages and injunctive relief. The count for damages alleged that the negligent failure of the District to maintain the ditch levy caused the canal water to flood and erode the land owned by plaintiff. The count for injunction was to compel the District to return the water to the constructed channel and to restore the land to the condition before encroachment. The defendant asserted the bar of limitations to the petition and moved dismissal of the action. The court sustained the motion, and the plaintiff appeals the judgment.
The memorandum of judgment rested decision on the premise that the petition was for a permanent nuisance with all damage fully accrued and so was precluded by the bar of limitations under §§ 516.100 and 516.120, RSMo 1978. That judgment necessarily rejected the pleading as a cause of action for temporary nuisance, abatable and separately accrued by each new incursion.
A motion to dismiss concedes the truth of all facts well pleaded.
Higday v. Nickolaus,
The petition of the plaintiff Rebel avers: that the defendant, a Drainage District corporation under Chapter 242, RSMo 1978, constructed a levy in year 1935 upon a right of way acquired by deed across described real property owned by the plaintiff. That since year 1967 the defendant District has neglected to maintain the south side of the levy, and that the neglect continues until the present with the result that the waters, otherwise contained by the levy, invade, flood and erode the land of the plaintiff. That the plaintiff complained repeatedly to *790 the defendant of the acts and omissions, but without heed. The plaintiff pleads damages for the erosion of the topsoil, the loss of use of ten acres of the land and other injury done by the invasion of the water and by the formation of an unnatural channel across the land by the diverted water. That the failure to maintain the levy has been intentional and reckless, as well as negligent, as to entitle the plaintiff to punitive damages.
The separate count for injunction pleads that the failure to maintain the levy has resulted in formation of an unnatural channel across the land of the plaintiff whereby acres of topsoil have been lost and the land made useless for crops. That the defendant District owes duty under Chapter 242 to maintain the levy in sound condition, and that the neglect of duty leaves the plaintiff without adequate remedy at law. That count prays the court for mandatory injunction that the defendant District rebuild and repair the levy embankment to return the water to the dedicated channel and that the District restore the land to the condition before the encroachment by the defendant.
The answer denied the allegations of the petition except to admit that the defendant was a Drainage District corporation under the provisions of Chapter 242, and moved the dismissal on the ground that the “claims and causes of action prayed for in plaintiff’s petition are barred by
the appropriate statute of limitations.”
[emphasis added] The order of dismissal found, simply: “the petition is barred by the statute of limitations, §§ 516.100 and 516.120.”
1
A plea of limitations, however, is an affirmative defense. Rule 55.08. A party who seeks the effect of the statute of limitations must plead the particular provision invoked for the defense.
Modine Manufacturing Company
v.
Carlock,
A statement of facts [as pleaded by the plaintiff] of flood damage to land from a levy embankment on the land of another asserts alternative causes of action for negligence, trespass, nuisance and — where, as here, the offending owner enjoys the power of eminent domain
3
— an informal condemnation.
Hawkins v. Burlington Northern, Inc.,
An action for private nuisance rests on tort liability.
Merrill
v.
City of St. Louis,
The contentions on appeal focus, rather, on the source of the damage the petition pleads. The plaintiff contends the facts allege a temporary source of damage, subject to abatement, and so actionable for each invasion of interest, injury by injury. The defendant contends that the facts allege a permanent source of damage, an injury in legal contemplation fully accrued for all present and prospective invasion of interest, and so actionable only once — when the invasion began or was manifest. Thus, determination of a nuisance as permanent or temporary bears both on the assessment of damages as well as on limitations. The subject of appeal, then, is whether the petition pleads a temporary or a permanent nuisance and the effect of the limitation of action as to each.
The period of limitations runs immediately upon the creation of a permanent nuisance and bars all claims of damage, present and future, after the lapse of the statutory period.
Spain v. City of Cape Girardeau,
The period of limitations as to a temporary nuisance, however, runs anew from the accrual of injury from every successive invasion of interest. The recovery is for the damage actually sustained to the commencement of suit, but not for prospective injury.
Hayes v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co.,
supra, 1. c.
*793 “ ‘is under legal obligation to remove, change, or repair the structure or thing complained of, and thereby terminate the injury to his neighbor; and, failing so to do, each day’s continuance of the nuisance is a repetition of the original wrong, and a new action will lie therefor.’ ”
The law assumes that a temporary nuisance will abate — if not by voluntary act of the tort-feasor then by judicial agency — and so confines recovery to injury already accrued. Thus, the measure of damages from a temporary nuisance is the depreciation of the rental or use value of the land during continuance of injury, as well as any special costs. 6
The defendant contends [and the judgment determines] that the petition pleads injury from a permanent structure — a drainage ditch — -as a matter of law, a permanent nuisance, which gave rise to a single cause of action when constructed in year 1935 or no later than year 1967 when the damage became manifest, and so pleads a recovery long since barred by “the appropriate statute of limitations.” It is the character of the source of injury rather than the character of the injury which determines between a temporary or permanent nuisance.
Hayes v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co.,
supra, l. c.
where the nuisance consists of a work or erection, which is permanent in its character, and which is necessarily injurious, the whole injury arises generally upon the completion of the work, the entire damage, present and prospective, accrues at once, and is the subject of a single action which must be brought within the period of limitation from the erection of the nuisance, [emphasis added]
Webb v. Union Electric Co. of Missouri, supra, l. c. 20[2, 3].
The judgment to dismiss entered on the petition rests exactly on the authority of
Powers
v.
St. Louis I. M. & S. Ry. Co.,
The petition does not, however, plead injury from the
construction
of the drainage ditch in year 1935, but from
neglect
by the District from year 1967 and continuously
“to maintain [the] levy
on the south side” so as to cause the waters, otherwise contained, to invade and damage the land of,the plaintiff. Where the inherent character of a structure in usual operation does not cause injury, but becomes harmful through negligence, the cause of injury can be abated, and the source of injury is a temporary nuisance.
Shelley v. Ozark Pipe Line Corporation,
supra, l. c.
The petition pleads a construction made harmful by the neglect of the defendant District from year 1967 and thereafter to maintain the south face of the levy so as to allow the contained waters to invade and flood the land of the plaintiff. The petition gives no intimation that the original construction in year 1935 as installed was faulty or necessarily injurious to the plaintiff. The allegations, at best intendment, plead a source of injury created by the defendant, which the defendant has a duty to abate, and which can be abated by an available technology at a reasonable expense.
Flanigan v. City of Springfield,
The judgment dismisses on the ground of limitations of actions as to both counts of the petition: for damages and for mandatory injunction to compel the District to perform the duty under § 242.320 to maintain the levy, and to restore the land of the plaintiff to original condition. The memorandum of decision expresses as the ground for dismissal that the allegations, as a matter of law, plead a permanent nuisance since barred by the five-year limitation of § 516.120. The memorandum gives no reason for the dismissal of the injunction count. As noted, the legal effect of the rationale of judgment — that the petition pleads a permanent nuisance barred by limitations — is to appropriate to the defendant District a permanent right to interfere with the land of the plaintiff to the extent accrued by practice. The plaintiff has no interest to enjoin a right already vested in the defendant. The premises of judgment as to both counts, therefore, are cognate and the reversal of dismissal as to the damages count requires reversal of dismissal as to the injunction count.
The determination of the use of the levy land by the District, whether reasona
*795
ble or unreasonable as to the plaintiff and whether a temporary nuisance or a permanent nuisance, will be determined by evidence on remand. The question of injunction also rests with evidence, but also with an evaluation by a court of equity as to the public interest served by grant or denial of the injunction remedy. In summary, the evaluation entails a utility versus gravity of harm balance, both to the substantive question of nuisance and to the remedy by injunction. The factors are by no means exclusive, but relate to the relative hardships of the parties, the equities between them, the interests of the public, the nature of the injury, all within the circumstances of the particular activity.
Lee v. Rolla Speedway, Inc.,
The judgment of dismissal is reversed and remanded with direction that the petition of the plaintiff be reinstated.
All concur.
Notes
.Section 516.100 defines when a cause of action accrues for the purpose of limitations. Section 516.120 defines which actions must be brought within five years, among them: “(3) An action for trespass on real estate." We assume that the court adopted the postulate of the argument submitted by the District on the motion to dismiss that the limitations for an action of trespass governed the petition.
. The judgment also dismissed the count for mandatory injunction as barred by limitations on the premise — we assume — that equity follows the law on limitations. That aspect of judgment was erroneous also, but for additional reasons.
. Section 242.190, RSMo 1978.
. Any interest sufficient as a property right in the land will support the action.
Fuchs v. Cur-ran Carbonizing & Engineering Co.,
. “The actor is liable in an action for damages for a nontrespassory invasion on another’s interest in the private use and enjoyment of land if,
(d) the invasion is either
(i) intentional and unreasonable; or
(ii) unintentional and otherwise actionable under the rules governing liability for negligent, reckless or ultrahazardous conduct.”
There remains a body of decisions, apparently unreconciled to the Committee Comment to MAI 22.06 [which explains the model instruction in terms of the Restatement definition of principle]. Those cases employ the test of strict liability to the nuisance recovery.
White v. Smith,
supra, 1. c. 502[6-8];
Haynor v. Excelsior Springs Light, Power, Heat & Water Co.,
. The petition pleads the measure of damages from a temporary nuisance: for loss of crops and a bam, for restoration of the land to the condition before the diversion of the water — all as consequences of the neglect to maintain the levy.
Shelley v. Ozark Pipe Line Corp.,
supra, 1. c.
. The statute of limitations for an abatable nuisance is that prescribed for the acquisition of title to land — or ten years. § 516.010, RSMo 1978;
City of Fredericktown v. Osborn,
