Rivenbark v. A. C. L. R. Co.

117 S.E. 206 | S.C. | 1923

Lead Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

Action for damages in a Magistrate’s Court, based upon the following complaint:

“(1) That the plaintiff is a resident of the Town of Hardeeville, in said county and the defendant is a railway corporation having a line of railway passing through, and an office and agent in, the said county and State.
“(2) That plaintiff lives in the town of Hardeeville, on the line of the defendant’s railroad, and is, and was at the time of the acts herein complained of, in possession of a garden, which he planted with vegetables in the spring of the year 1921.
“(3) That the natural d'rainage of the ground where the plaintiff planted his vegetables is on, towards, upon, and across the railroad right of way, but the defendant built and maintains an embankment on which to operate its trains, which embankment stops the natural drainage, and the said railway company, in order to carry away the surface water which naturally, would flow over its right of way, constructed a ditch to lead off the surface water, which otherwise would be dammed up by said embankment, and would overflow and submerge the lands of the plaintiff on which he planted his said vegetable garden.
“ (4) That the defendant, in utter disregard of the rights of the plaintiff and in violation of its duty, allowed its drainage ditch to become stopped up and obstructed, and, although requested by the plaintiff to do so, refused and neglected to *138clean out and maintain the said ditch, thereby causing, in the months of June and July, 1921, the surface water to accumulate and overflow and submerge and flood the plaintiff’s land and destroy the plaintiff’s crops of collards, potatoes, peas, and strawberry plants, and other plants and vegetables, and converting plaintiff’s land into a fish pond wherein catfish disported themselves, to' plaintiff’s damage in the sum of one hundred dollars.”

The defendant demurred to this complaint upon the ground that it failed to state a cause of action, in that it showed upon its face that it was “an action brought against the defendant for neglect to clean out and maintain a ditch and for backing surface water on the land of the plaintiff.” The demurrer was overruled.

Plaintiff testified:

“The natural drainage is across the railroad track. The right of way ditch runs within 4 or 5 feet of his garden. The town ditch drains into the railroad ditch. The railroad ditch was stopped up with cross-ties, which prevented the flow of water. I requested the ditch to be opened. * * * Rainwater drowned my garden. The nearest living stream is about. three-quarters of a mile. The water that drowned my garden did not come from any stream of water, but flowed in when it rained. If the railroad ditch had not been stopped up, the water would not have damaged me. It. was flooded generality around when it rained. There was not water there until a rainy time.”

*139*138The Magistrate found the facts substantially in accordance with the foregoing testimony, held that the conduct of the defendant in allowing the drainage ditch to become stopped up with cross-ties constituted actionable negligence, and rendered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $100. The Circuit Judge affirmed the judgment of the Magistrate, and the defendant appeals upon the exceptions, which allege in substance that neither the facts stated in the complaint nor the facts found by the Magistrate and approved by the Cir*139cuit Judge are sufficient to support the plaintiff’s recovery. The legal rights and duties of a railroad company, in possession of real estate held and used by virtue of such title as gives it dominion and control thereof for the purpose of carrying on a lawful business, differ in no essential particular from the rights and duties of any other landed proprietor in the same circumstances or under like conditions. See Edwards v. Ry. Co., 39 S. C., 472; 18 S. E., 58; 22 L. R. A., 246; 39 Am. St. Rep., 746. So here any duty owned by the railroad to the plaintiff with respect to the use and maintenance of a ditch for the drainage of surface water on its premises is in contemplation of law the same duty that would have been owed by any other adjacent owner of the lower land, and is precisely the same duty that the plaintiff would have owed the railroad, if the ■situation of the parties had been reveresed. In that view, a hypothetical statement of the case, with the positions of the parties reversed, may tend to clarify the issue. Suppose the plaintiff, the owner of the garden, were the lower proprietor, instead of the railroad, and had seen fit to fill up a drainage ditch, or allow it to become obstructed, or to take out tile drains, which he had previously maintained in good condition in his garden, as a result of which surface water was backed upon the railroad’s premises, to the injury of the track and roadbed; would the railroad have had a cause of action for the consequential damages against the plaintiff? Clearly not, we think, under the common-law rule as to surface water prevailing in this state and applied by this Court in numerous decisions.

The case at bar is closely assimilated to and is clearly ruled by the principles of law recognized and applied by this Court in the following cases: Edwards v. Railway Co., 39 S. C., 472; 18 S. E., 58; 22 L. R. A., 246; 39 Am. St. Rep., 746. Baltzeger v. Railway Co., 54 S. C., 242 ; 32 S. E., 358; 71 Am. St. Rep., 789. Lawton v. Railroad Co., 61 S. C., 548; 39 S. E., 752. Johnson v. Railway Co., *14071 S. C., 241; 50 S. E., 775; 110 Am. St. Rep., 572. Touchberry v. Railroad Co., 83 S. C., 314; 65 S. E., 343. Id., 87 S. C., 415; 69 S. E., 877. Cannon v. Railroad Co., 97 S. C., 233; 81 S. E., 476. In the Touchberry Case, 87 S. C., at page 423; 69 S. E., at page 878, the present Chief Justice thus clearly and fully states the rule, with the recognized exceptions, announced and applied in the foregoing decisions, as follows:

“In the case of Lawton v. Railway, 61 S. C., 548; 39 S. E., 752, that great jurist, Mr. Chief Justice Mclver thus states the rule in this state, as to surface water:' ‘The obstruction of the flow of surface water, and the waters of a natural water course, are two distinct and very different things, and are attended by entirely different consequences. The former is not actionable while the latter, if resulting in damage to an adjoining land proprietor is actionable. In this state, at least, it is well settled that the common-law rule prevails, and that surface water is regarded as a common enemy, which each landed proprietor may keep off his own premises, even though, by so doing, he may throw or keep it on his neighbors’ premises, (citing Edwards v. Railway, 39 S. C., 472; 18 S. E., 58; 22 L. R. A., 246, and Baltzeger v. Railway, 54 S. Ct., 242; 32 S. E., 358). In a note to the case of Gray v. Williams, 21 L. R. A., on page 593, the rule of the common-law is thus stated: ‘The gist of so-called common-law rule is that one may do as he pleases with his property, regardless of the effect upon surface water. This rule recognizes the right of each proprietor to fight surface water. Jones v. Hanover, 55 Mo. 462. And the result is that, if carried to its ultimate conclusion, it simply means that the Courts will recognize no wrong in any action undertaken for the purpose of getting rid of surface water, so that neither its detention, diversion, nor repulsion is an actionable injury, even though damage ensue. Bowlsby v. Spear, 31 N. J. L. 351, 86 Am. Dec., 216.’ The foregoing language is quoted with approval in *141Baltseger v. Railway, 54 S. C., 242; 32 S. E., 358. There are only two exceptions to the rule that surface water, being a common enemy, every landowner may use such means as he may see fit in dealing with it: (1) ‘It is subject to the general law in regard to nuisances, if its accumulation has become a nuisance per se, as, for example,, whether it has become dangerous at all times, and under all circumstances, to life, health, or property.’ Baltzeger v. Railway, 54 S. C., 242 ; 32 S. E., 358; and (2) it is an actionable injury, for a person to collect surface water, into an artificial channel, and cast it on another’s land, in concentrated form. Brandenburg v. Zeigler, 62 S. C., 18; 39 S. E., 790; 55 L. R. A., 414, and Cain v. Railway, 62 S. C., 25; 39 S. E., 792. There are expressions in the case of Edwards v. Railway, 39 S. C., 472, 18 S. E., 58, which seemingly recognize the principle that the right of a landed proprietor to deal with surface water is dependent upon the absence of negligence on his part; but the language of the Court in Baltzeger v. Railway, 54 S. C., 242 ; 32 S. E., 358, explanatory of the doctrine announced in the Bdwards Case, shows that a person dealing with surface water on his own land, is not bound to exercise reasonable care, with regard to the rights of other landowners.”

If the defendant owed no duty to drain surface water from its right of way for the benefit of the upper proprietor, the owner of the garden, the stopping of its drainage ditch by the use of its premises for the legitimate purpose of storing cross-ties thereon could not be imputed to it as negligence, any more than could the construction of an embankment across the ditch for the purposes of a sidetrack. Neither the allegations of the complaint nor the facts adduced in evidence bring the case within the exceptions noted as to a nuisance, or as to casting water through an artificial channel in concentrated form upon the lands of another. See application of the latter exception in the recent case of Faust v. Richland County, 117 S. C., 251; 109 S. E., 151.

*142Respondent argues that the finding of the Magistrate, affirmed by the Circuit Judge, was tantamount to a finding of fact that the drainage ditch on the right of way was a natural water course and not a mere artificial channel for the drainage of surface water. The complaint alleges that the ditch was constructed “to carry away the surface water which naturally would flow over its right of way,” etc., and that the obstruction of the ditch caused “the surface water to accumulate and oveflow * * * the plaintiff’s land,” etc. The evidence tends to sustain rather than to impeach the correctness of that diagnosis of the character of the water, and clearly precludes the inference that the channel “constructed” for its drainage was a natural water course. See Lawton v. Railway Co., 61 S. C., 548; 39 S. E., 752.

In this connection, the plaintiff’s statement that catfish disported themselves in his garden is interesting and doubtless true. But in view of the well-known ability of this genus of fish to enjoy life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness in any ordinary surface water pond, and of the well-establised. habit of certain species of the family of traveling long distances over dry land from puddle to pond, we incline to the opinion that the presence of the catfish did not conclusively establish that defendant’s ditch was a natural water course. The writer regrets that he is unable personally to vouch for the foregoing naturalistic data or to buttress same with an opposite opinion from the decisions of this Court, and therefore feels constrained to refer the legal student of piscatorial instincts and inquiring mind to a more or less illuminating article on the subject of catfish in the Ency. Brit. (11th Ed.), Vol. V, p. 512.

The further contentions that the judgment should be upheld on the ground that the railroad company was estopped to deny plaintiff’s right to drainage through the ditch, or on the ground that plaintiff had acquired a prescriptive right to the use of the ditch on the *143railroad’s premises, are likewise untenable. No such issues were raised in or passed on by the Courts below, and the points thereto directed are not properly before this Court. But, if they were, the complaint, does not assert such right, and we find nothing in the evidence tending to establsh that the plaintiff had acquired through estoppel or by prescription an easement to drain surface water through the defendant’s ditch. See 27 R. C. L., 1161, § 84. There is no suggestion in the evidence of such adverse use by the plaintiff as is necessary to create a prescriptive right or interest in the real property of another.

The judgment is reversed and the complaint dismissed.

Reversed.

Mr. Ci-iiee Justice) Gary and Messrs. Justices Watts and Cothran concur.





Lead Opinion

April 10, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Action for damages in a Magistrate's Court, based upon the following complaint:

"(1) That the plaintiff is a resident of the Town of Hardeeville, in said county and the defendant is a railway corporation having a line of railway passing through, and an office and agent in, the said county and State.

"(2) That plaintiff lives in the town of Hardeeville, on the line of the defendant's railroad, and is, and was at the time of the acts herein complained of, in possession of a garden, which he planted with vegetables in the spring of the year 1921.

"(3) That the natural drainage of the ground where the plaintiff planted his vegetables is on, towards, upon, and across the railroad right of way, but the defendant built and maintains an embankment on which to operate its trains, which embankment stops the natural drainage, and the said railway company, in order to carry away the surface water which naturally would flow over its right of way, constructed a ditch to lead off the surface water, which otherwise would be dammed up by said embankment, and would overflow and submerge the lands of the plaintiff on which he planted his said vegetable garden.

"(4) That the defendant, in utter disregard of the rights of the plaintiff and in violation of its duty, allowed its drainage ditch to become stopped up and obstructed, and, although requested by the plaintiff to do so, refused and neglected to *138 clean out and maintain the said ditch, thereby causing, in the months of June and July, 1921, the surface water to accumulate and overflow and submerge and flood the plaintiff's land and destroy the plaintiff's crops of collards, potatoes, peas, and strawberry plants, and other plants and vegetables, and converting plaintiff's land into a fish pond wherein catfish disported themselves, to plaintiff's damage in the sum of one hundred dollars."

The defendant demurred to this complaint upon the ground that it failed to state a cause of action, in that it showed upon its face that it was "an action brought against the defendant for neglect to clean out and maintain a ditch and for backing surface water on the land of the plaintiff." The demurrer was overruled.

Plaintiff testified:

"The natural drainage is across the railroad track. The right of way ditch runs within 4 or 5 feet of his garden. The town ditch drains into the railroad ditch. The railroad ditch was stopped up with cross-ties, which prevented the flow of water. I requested the ditch to be opened. * * * Rainwater drowned my garden. The nearest living stream is about three-quarters of a mile. The water that drowned my garden did not come from any stream of water, but flowed in when it rained. If the railroad ditch had not been stopped up, the water would not have damaged me. It was flooded generally around when it rained. There was not water there until a rainy time."

The Magistrate found the facts substantially in accordance with the foregoing testimony, held that the conduct of the defendant in allowing the drainage ditch to become stopped up with cross-ties constituted actionable negligence, and rendered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $100. The Circuit Judge affirmed the judgment of the Magistrate, and the defendant appeals upon the exceptions, which allege in substance that neither the facts stated in the complaint nor the facts found by the Magistrate and approved by the Circuit *139 Judge are sufficient to support the plaintiff's recovery.

The legal rights and duties of a railroad company, in possession of real estate held and used by virtue of such title as gives it dominion and control thereof for the purpose of carrying on a lawful business, differ in no essential particular from the rights and duties of any other landed proprietor in the same circumstances or under like conditions. See Edwards v. Ry. Co., 39 S.C. 472;18 S.E., 58; 22 L.R.A., 246; 39 Am. St. Rep., 746. So here any duty owned by the railroad to the plaintiff with respect to the use and maintenance of a ditch for the drainage of surface water on its premises is in contemplation of law the same duty that would have been owned by any other adjacent owner of the lower land, and is precisely the same duty that the plaintiff would have owed the railroad, if the situation of the parties had been reversed. In that view, a hypothetical statement of the case, with the positions of the parties reversed, may tend to clarify the issue. Suppose the plaintiff, the owner of the garden, were the lower proprietor, instead of the railroad, and had seen fit to fill up a drainage ditch, or allow it to become obstructed, or to take out tile drains, which he had previously maintained in good condition in his garden, as a result of which surface water was backed upon the railroad's premises, to the injury of the track and roadbed; would the railroad have had a cause of action for the consequential damages against the plaintiff? Clearly not, we think, under the common-law rule as to surface water prevailing in this state and applied by this Court in numerous decisions.

The case at bar is closely assimilated to and is clearly ruled by the principles of law recognized and applied by this Court in the following cases: Edwards v. Railway Co.,39 S.C. 472; 18 S.E., 58; 22 L.R.A., 246; 39 Am. St. Rep., 746. Baltzeger v. Railway Co., 54 S.C. 242;32 S.E., 358; 71 Am. St. Rep., 789. Lawton v. Railroad Co.,61 S.C. 548; 39 S.E., 752. Johnson v. Railway Co., *140 71 S.C. 241; 50 S.E., 775; 110 Am. St. Rep., 572.Touchberry v. Railroad Co., 83 S.C. 314; 65 S.E., 343.Id., 87 S.C. 415; 69 S.E., 877. Cannon v. Railroad Co.,97 S.C. 233; 81 S.E., 476. In the Touchberry Case, 87 S.C. at page 423; 69 S.E., at page 878, the present Chief Justice thus clearly and fully states the rule, with the recognized exceptions, announced and applied in the foregoing decisions, as follows:

"In the case of Lawton v. Railway, 61 S.C. 548;39 S.E., 752, that great jurist, Mr. Chief Justice McIver thus states the rule in this state, as to surface water: "The obstruction of the flow of surface water, and the waters of a natural water course, are two distinct and very different things, and are attended by entirely different consequences. The former is not actionable while the latter, if resulting in damage to an adjoining land proprietor is actionable. In this state, at least, it is well settled that the common-law rule prevails, and that surface water is regarded as a common enemy, which each landed proprietor may keep off his own premises, even though, by so doing, he may throw or keep it on his neighbors' premises, (citing Edwards v.Railway, 39 S.C. 472; 18 S.E., 58; 22 L.R.A., 246, andBaltzeger v. Railway, 54 S.Ct., 242; 32 S.E., 358). In a note to the case of Gray v. Williams, 21 L.R.A., on page 593, the rule of the common-law is thus stated: `The gist of so-called common-law rule is that one may do as he pleases with his property, regardless of the effect upon surface water. This rule recognizes the right of each proprietor to fight surface water. Jones v. Hanover,55 Mo. 462. And the result is that, if carried to its ultimate conclusion, it simply means that the Courts will recognize no wrong in any action undertaken for the purpose of getting rid of surface water, so that neither its detention, diversion, nor repulsion is an actionable injury, even though damage ensue. Bowlsby v. Spear, 31 N.J.L. 351, 86 Am. Dec., 216.' The foregoing language is quoted with approval in *141 Baltzeger v. Railway, 54 S.C. 242; 32 S.E., 358. There are only two exceptions to the rule that surface water, being a common enemy, every landowner may use such means as he may see fit in dealing with it: (1) `It is subject to the general law in regard to nuisance, if its accumulation has become a nuisance per se, as, for example, whether it has become dangerous at all times, and under all circumstances, to life, health, or property.' Baltzeger v. Railway,54 S.C. 242; 32 S.E., 358; and (2) it is an actionable injury, for a person to collect surface water, into an artificial channel, and cast it on another's land, in concentrated form. Brandenburg v. Zeigler, 62 S.C. 18; 39 S.E., 790; 55 L.R.A., 414, and Cain v. Railway, 62 S.C. 25;39 S.E., 792. There are expressions in the case of Edwards v.Railway, 39 S.C. 472, 18 S.E., 58, which seemingly recognize the principle that the right of a landed proprietor to deal with surface water is dependant upon the absence of negligence on his part; but the language of the Court inBaltzeger v. Railway, 54 S.C. 242; 32 S.E., 358, explanatory of the doctrine announced in the Edwards Case, shows that a person dealing with surface water on his own land, is not bound to exercise reasonable care, with regard to the rights of other landowners."

If the defendant owed no duty to drain surface water from its right of way for the benefit of the upper proprietor, the owner of the garden, the stopping of its drainage ditch by the use of its premises for the legitimate purpose of storing cross-ties thereon could not be imputed to it as negligence, any more than could the construction of an embankment across the ditch for the purposes of a sidetrack. Neither the allegations of the complaint nor the facts adduced in evidence bring the case within the exceptions noted as to a nuisance, or as to casting water through an artificial channel in concentrated form upon the lands of another. See application of the latter exception in the recent case ofFaust v. Richland County, 117 S.C. 251; 109 S.E., 151. *142

Respondent argues that the finding of the Magistrate, affirmed by the Circuit Judge, was tantamount to a finding of fact that the drainage ditch on the right of way was a natural water course and not a mere artificial channel for the drainage of surface water. The complaint alleges that the ditch was constructed "to carry away the surface water which naturally would flow over its right of way," etc., and that the obstruction of the ditch caused "the surface water to accumulate and overflow * * * the plaintiff's land," etc. The evidence tends to sustain rather than to impeach the correctness of that diagnosis of the character of the water, and clearly precludes the inference that the channel "constructed" for its drainage was a natural water course. See Lawton v. Railway Co., 61 S.C. 548;39 S.E., 752.

In this connection, the plaintiff's statement that catfish disported themselves in his garden is interesting and doubtless true. But in view of the well-known ability of this genus of fish to enjoy life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness in any ordinary surface water pond, and of the well-established habit of certain species of the family of travelling long distances over dry land from puddle to pond, we incline to the opinion that the presence of the catfish did not conclusively establish that defendant's ditch was a natural water course. The writer regrets that he is unable personally to vouch for the foregoing naturalistic data or to buttress same with an opposite opinion from the decisions of this Court, and therefore feels constrained to refer the legal student of piscatorial instincts and inquiring mind to a more or less illuminating article on the subject of catfish in the Ency. Brit. (11th Ed.), Vol. V, p. 512.

The further contentions that the judgment should be upheld on the ground that the railroad company was estopped to deny plaintiff's right to drainage through the ditch, or on the ground that plaintiff had acquired a prescriptive right to the use of the ditch on the *143 railroad's premises, are likewise untenable. No such issues were raised in or passed on by the Courts below, and the points thereto directed are not properly before this Court. But, if they were, the complaint does not assert such right, and we find nothing in the evidence tending to establish that the plaintiff had acquired through estoppel or by prescription an easement to drain surface water through the defendant's ditch. See 27 R.C.L., 1161, § 84. There is no suggestion in the evidence of such adverse use by the plaintiff as is necessary to create a prescriptive right or interest in the real property of another.

The judgment is reversed and the complaint dismissed.

Reversed.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS. JUSTICES WATTS and COTHRAN concur.

MR. JUSTICE FRASER: I must dissent.

The majority opinion correctly states the Law up to the case of the School District v. Marion County, 114 S.C. 383;103 S.E., 767. The Court en banc in Faust v. RichlandCounty, 117 S.C. 251; 109 S.E., 151, distinctly allows damages for the obstruction of surface water, and I feel bound by the decision in the Faust Case.






Dissenting Opinion

Mr. Justice Fraser:

I must dissent.

The majority opinion correctly states the Law up to the case of the School District v. Marion County, 114 S. C., 383; 103 S. E., 767. The Court en banc in Faust v. Richland County, 117 S. C., 251; 109 S. E., 151, distinctly allows damages for the obstruction of surface water, and I feel bound by the decision in the, Faust Case.