Reinhart v. Sutton

58 Kan. 726 | Kan. | 1897

Doster, C. J.

The Southern Kansas Railroad, now a part of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railway *727system, was built through, the town of Neosho Rapids, Kansas, in 1882. It borders closely upon Seventh Street in the town named. On the opposite side of Seventh Street, the defendant in error owned and kept a hotel building and grounds. The Railroad Company dug a ditch, on its right of way, parallel to and very near the line of the street, which ditch, in time, by the erosion of the soil, widened in places to more than twenty feet, and deepened in others to ten feet; and, at some points opposite the hotel property, it encroached considerably upon the street, making access to the hotel and egress from it difficult and dangerous, and impairing its value for the purposes used. This ditch was dug to carry off surface water, which ran down a depression or draw, to some extent, but which largely spread out over the ground forming the right of way. In 1893, the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Kansas appointed the plaintiffs in error receivers of all the roads embraced in the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Pe railway system, and they remained in charge of its property and the operation of its lines until 1895. The defendant in error sued the receivers in the District Court of Lyon County for an abatement of the ditch as a private nuisance and for damages caused by its maintenance. The jury found that the ditch was a nuisance, as claimed, and assessed damages for its maintenance at ten dollars. The court ordered that the ditch, as a nuisance, be abated by covering it up to a grade level with.Seventh Street. To reverse this order this proceeding in error is brought.

*7281. Judgment by state court conclusive, except. *727It is said that the action cannot be maintained against the receivers, because they are officers of the court appointing them, administering a trust under the direction of such court, and in nowise responsible *728to any other tribunal; that the funds in their possession are trust funds, which can be expended only by order of the court from which they derive their authority, and that the judgment, being one they cannot legally obey, should not have been rendered. These objections are easily disposed of. The amendment of August 13, 1888, to the Federal Judiciary Act declares :

“Sec. 2. That whenever in any cause pending in any court of the United States there shall be a receiver or manager in possession of any property, such receiver or manager shall manage or operate such property according to the requirements of the valid laws of the state in which such property shall be situated, in the same manner that the owner or possessor thereof would be bound to do if in possession thereof,” etc.
“ Sec. 3. That every receiver or manager of any property appointed by any court of the United States may be sued in respect of any act or transaction of his in carrying on the business connected with such property, without the previous leave of the court in which such receiver or manager was appointed; but such suit shall be subject to the general equity jurisdiction of the court in which such receiver or manager was appointed, so far as the same shall be necessary to the ends of justice.” 25 U. S. Stat. at Large, 436.

By the section first quoted, receivers are to manage trust property the same as the owner was required to manage it. Therefore, if the Railroad Company was under obligation to abate the nuisance of this ditch, or to pay damages for not doing it, the receivers are likewise bound. By the section last quoted, receivers may be sued in courts other than the one appointing them; subject, however, to the general equity jurisdiction of the court from which their authority is derived. In Dillingham v. Hawk (60 Fed. Rep. 494), *729the United States Circuit Court of Appeals construed the last section, or rather the one contained in an act of March 3, 1887, of which that of 1888 is a corrected ' enrollment, and held :

“Under act of Congress, March 3, 1887, which declares that every receiver appointed by a Federal court may be sued without previous leave of that court, but that ‘ such suits shall be subject to the general equity jurisdiction of the court in which such receiver was appointed so far as the same shall be necessary to the ends of justice,’ a judgment rendered against such a receiver by a state court in an action at law, is conclusive as to the existence and amount of the plaintiff’s claim, but the time and manner of its payment are to be controlled by the court appointing the receiver.”

This case — and indeed the statute itself, without the aid of the explanatory decision — is conclusive against the claim of the plaintiff in error upon this point.

lot owner may sue, wlien. It is next claimed that the defendant in error has no such interest in the street as will entitle her to complain of its obstructon by another person equally entitled to its use for his purposes ; and K. N. & D. Rld. Co. v. Cuykendall (42 Kan. 234) is cited. In that case, the railroad company constructed its road-bed, on its right of way, across ° a street, and thereby partially obstructed approach to and exit from private property. It did so, however, in conformity to legal authority and in a proper manner ; and for these reasons it was held free from liability to an abutting lot owner. In this case, the encroachment of the ditch upon the street was no part of the proper construction or operation of the railroad, and it therefore falls within the class excepted out of the rule by the very language of the opinion in K. N. & D. Rld. Co. v. Cuykendall, supra, *730where it is said : ‘ ‘ There are cases in which a different rule would be applied, as where the city council has not authorized the use of the street by the railroad company; or where the railroad is operated in an illegal or wrongful manner.”

Finally, it is claimed that the ditch was dug for the purpose of draining surface water from the railroad right of way, and that the flow of surface water may be lawfully obstructed or diverted by one proprietor, even to the injury of another. Such, it is true, is the law, but this is not a case which falls within its terms. This is not a case of the obstruction or diversion of water flow. It is a case of the discharge of surface water, in a manner not its wont, through an artificial channel, by one proprietor upon the land of another, to his damage. The common law, which in respect to such matter prevails here, will not tolerate this. Gould on Waters, § 271. A great array of cases cited by the author supports him as to this.

The fact that the ditch was originally dug on the Railroad Company’s right of way cannot, under the circumstances of this case, prevent an application of the rule last stated. It was dug very close to the street, and, by the natural action of the elements, soon widened into the street. One may not discharge surface water from his own land, through an artificial channel, so near to the land of another that its natural and inevitable tendency is to encroach upon it through causes easy to foresee and guard against. The proximate cause of the injury in such case is the original digging of the ditch.

In Livingston v. McDonald (21 Iowa 160), a ditch for the drainage of surface water was dug to a point within sixty feet of the land of an adjoining owner. At this point, it discharged the water into a previously existing channel, which carried it about thirty *731feet nearer the premises of the lower proprietor. The water washed its way over the remaining thirty feet, to the injury of the lower land. The owner was held entitled to a recovery. In Pettigrew v. Evansville (25 Wis. 223), a similar decision was made; the court saying:

“We cannot assent at all to the position of counsel, that because the ditch was not to be extended quite up to the plaintiff’s line, and the water conducted upon his land in that manner, the injury was of that indirect and consequential kind for which the village is not responsible. It was an injury as direct as if such had been the mode in which the water was to be conducted, and there can be no rational ground for discrimination. He who sets in motion a destructive or injurious element, as fire or water, upon his own land, knowing that it must immediately pass upon the land of his neighbor to his damage, commits a direct 'injury, and cannot, as counsel seem to suppose, claim exemption from liability, or escape the consequences, on the ground that the wind blew the fire, or the law of gravitation caused the water to run. Availing himself of these agencies of nature, it is his direct act, as much as if he were to throw earth, gravel, stone, or other materials upon his own land, under circumstances where, without ceasing their motion, they would pass at once upon the land of his neighbor.”

In Fletcher v. Rylands (Law Reports, 1 Exchequer [1865—’6] *279), it appeared that the water of an artificially constructed reservoir burst through its bottom to a subterranean passage-way and flowed from thence through intervening land to a colliery, which it flooded to the collier’s damage. It was held that a recovery could be had, even though the owners of the reservoir were guiltless of negligence ; the court resting its decision upon the principle, applicable to a great variety of cases, that “the person who for his own purposes brings upon his lands, and collects and *732keeps there, anything likely to do mischief if it escapes, must keep it in at his peril; and if he does not do so, is prima facie answerable for all damage which is the natural consequence of its escape.”

Nor is the rule different because the encroachment was not upon the land of the defendant in error. It was, however, upon the public highway, in which she, as an abutting lot owner, has a private interest. Of that interest she may not be deprived by any unlawful use of the highway by another. Elliott on Roads and Streets, 302.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

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