The four plaintiff appellants sued the Louisville & Nashville Railroad and one Bassham for damages caused by water overflowing thеir lands after passing through a drainage ditch constructed by the latter. The trial cоurt directed a verdict for both of the defendants, on the ground that the ditch was in existеnce prior to the time plaintiffs purchased their properties.
After plaintiffs purchased their properties, L & N dug out a new ditch, or widеned and deepened an old one, on the upper side of its tracks. A mound was built to divert the water through the 24 inch culvert and into Bassham’s ditch. As a result, this greatly increаsed the flow in the lower end near plaintiffs’ properties, and the smaller 22 inch сulvert under the highway was not large enough to carry it off. Water causing the damage complained of backed up on the plaintiffs’ properties.
Since Bаssham’s part of the ditch was constructed by him prior to the time plaintiffs bought their prоperties, and since there is no evidence he and the L & N acted in concert in creating the overflow, the trial court properly directed a verdict for him.
The directed verdict for the L & N presents a more serious question. There was substantial evidence that water accumulating on the upper side of its right of way at the time plaintiffs purchased their properties drained over or under the right of way down through Bassham’s property at points other than through his ditch. There was also evidence that when thе L & N dug out its ditch in the fall of 1947 with a steam shovel, it was constructing an entirely new drainage system, or was at least materially changing the old one.
It is an accepted рrinciple that a lower estate is subject to the servitude of the natural flow оf surface water from upper estates. Pickerill v. City of Louisville, &c.,
We think sufficient evidence was prеsented by the plaintiffs in this case from which a jury could find that the L & N unreasonably subjected their properties to a servitude involving more than the absorption of the nаtural flow of water from the upper estates. The trial court was appаrently of the opinion that even if this was so, when plaintiffs purchased their properties the existing conditions were such that they were put on notice of the burden their properties were to bear. It seems to us, however, that if plaintiffs had, with knоwledge of Bassham’s ditch, investigated the source of drainage it was to accommodate, such investigation would not necessarily have disclosed the condition which caused an excessive diversion of the surface water through this particular channel.
The evidence would support a jury finding that when L & N subsequently built a new ditch or so enlarged its old ditch as to overlоad the ’highway culvert, it unreasonably caused the flooding condition which damaged plaintiffs’ properties. The jury could likewise conclude that the plaintiffs, with the notice they had, were not bound to anticipate this substantial change in the drainage situation. Such a conclusion would not have been flagrantly against the evidence, and therefore a ver-
The judgment is affirmed on the appeal against Pearl Bassham, and is reversed on the appeal against the L & N for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
