71 Miss. 547 | Miss. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
The cause of action of appellant is stated as follows, in-substance, in the'declaration: That Sinai was the owner and in possession of a valuable plantation in section 21, township 13, range 7, in Issaquena county, in this state, worth the sum of $20,000; that the plantation was in what is commonly known as the “Yazoo and Mississippi Delta,” where the lands are almost level, and the channels of the streams shallow and the flow of their waters sluggish, and the beds incapable of containing their contents in rainy seasons ; that the lands said to have been damaged in-this suit, lie between Deer creek and Mound bayou, on and near Otter bayou, Mound bayou being six miles west of Deer creek and two miles west of Otter bayou, and"all flowing on pai’allel lines in the same general southerly direction; that the three streams named are all natural water-courses, and that there is a gentle and gradual downward slope in the earth’s surface westward from the west bank of Deer creek, and a gradual downward slope eastward from the east bank of Mound bayou; that the lands on Otter bayou were good lands for agricultural purposes before the action of the appellee in
To this declaration the railway company interposed its demurrer, averring its non-liahility for obstructing the flow of surface water, and, the court sustaining the demurrer, the appellant comes to this court.
The question presented'is resolvable by the application of common law principles to new and changed conditions. At the ancient common law every land-owner fought and fenced against surface water as suited his necessities. It was a common enemy, which the land-holder dealt with according to his own pleasure, for his own protection. But this strict rule had its origin when the soil was used for agricultural purposes. In that primeval day of the law’s birth and growth, a railway corporation as a land-owner was undreamed of. Now, with a net-work of railway lands spread all over, the face of the country, we are called to deal, in the application of legal principles, with a condition of affairs not thought of when every man fought surface water to suit his own fancy. Still, then, as now, the rule was that each must so use his own as not to do unnecessary harm to another. Each proprietor has the right to the use and possession of his own soil; each has equality of proprietary rights, and upon each is imposed in organized society, regulated by law, resting on mutual concession, reciprocal duties and correlative obligations. No one, natural or artificial, has the absolute dominion
A railway corporation is an artificial being, created by the state for the public good. To this end, the artificial creation is clothed with great privileges and. powers. It may, and generally does, exercise one of the attributes'of sovereignty— to wit, the right of eminent domain. This is wisely permitted to subserve the general welfare — the public, all the, individual members of society, being supposed to be interested in and to be benefited by the attainments of the ends for which the railway corporation is created. Brit, in the use and exercise of its privileges- and powers, we must not assume that the state designed to disturb well-settled, general legal principles, and to absolve its creation from the observance of the same rules of conduct as apply to and govern the natural person. The railway corpoi’ation must not recklessly and wilfully use its powers to the injury of the citizen. It must use its privileges in such manner as may be necessary to meet the objects of its creation; but it must do so with reasonable care and skill. It may, by proper expropriation proceedings, take private property for its public use, but it must first make compensation to the owner despoiled, and. the owner, as well as any other citizens affected by its construction, has a right to insist that future evils, foreseen as likely to follow a particular method of exercising the powers granted the railway corporation, shall be guarded against, if the same can be conveniently and reasonably done, regal’d being had to the interests of the corporation as well as of the individual citizen.
If in the execution of chartered rights it shall become necessary to do a particular act in a particular manner, it may safely do so, though evil may result to others; but if the same act may as well be done for .the railway’s interests in another way, and without hurt to others, reason and justice will require the adoption of the non-hurtful method of exe
With railway corporations as with natural persons employed in the same or like work, it must be true that unnecessary and wanton injury may not be done one by another in the use and enjoyment of his proprietary rights. The rule possessing flexibility and adaptability to all conditions likely to arise, is that which guards the right of the land-owner to deal with his own as he will, qualified by the duty imposed upon him to so use his own as not to hurt his neighbor, if that be reasonably within his power." In the case at bar, to reach a right conclusion, we must consider the character and value of construction or embankment; the likely to be foreseen interference with the usual flow of the waters in. a region marked with the striking configuration of the Delta, as appears by the averments of the declaration; the exlent and amount of the injury done to adjacent land-owners compared with the cost and value of the embankment, and whether any other method of construction, equally safe, convenient and inexpensive might have been adopted.
According to the averments of the declaration, injury to the extent of $10,000 has been done the plantation, when, the evil being easily foreseen, another method of construction, as cheap, as safe, as convenient, was open to the railway company when engaged in the construction of its line. The demurrer should have been overruled, and the railway company required to answer the case thus made against it.
This view is perfectly in accord with that of Lawrence v. Railway Co., 71 Eng. Com. Law R., 643, as well as the following American cases : Shane v. Railroad Co., 71 Mo., 237; Thompson v. Androscoggin Co., 54 N. H., 545; Gilbert v. Savannah, etc., Railroad, 69 Ga., 396; Trustees v. Spears, 16 Ind., 441; Livingston v. McDonald, 21 Iowa, 160; Gillham v. Railroad
Reversed and remanded.