delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for damages. Respondent alleged damages to her land and improvements thereon, and the loss of two cows. Respondent charged the petitioner with negligence in permitting water containing harmful chemicals to flow from its compressor station upon her land thereby causing the damages incurred.
Petitioner answered the suit with a general denial and a special plea denying that the water complained of was impure and contaminated with chemicals of any nature. Petitioner further alleged that respondent’s cause of action accrued more than two years prior to the time respondent filed her original petition in this cause, and, therefore, was barred by the provision of Article 5526, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, the two-year statute of limitation.
The issues thus raised were presented to the court and jury, but at the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court responded to petitioner’s motion for instructed verdict and motion that the case be withdrawn from the jury, and rendered judgment that respondent take nothing by her suit. The Court of Civil Appeals has held that the cause of action alleged by respondent was not barred by the statute of limitations and has reversed and remanded the cause for new trial.
Petitioner and respondent agree that the Court of Civil Appeals has correctly stated the nature of the suit. Petitioner contends here that the Court was in error in holding that the cause was not barred by the statute of limitations, supra. We have concluded that the case, from the standpoint of pleadings and proof, is barred by the statute of limitations and that the petitioner’s position should be sustained. The rules controlling our conclusion in this case have been announced and followed in many cases. “Where there is a direct invasion of one’s property of a permanent character, and the original invasion and its continuance are necessarily injurious, the damage is original, and may be at once fully compensated * * *. In such case the statute begins to run from the date of the invasion * * 28 Tex. Jur. 149, Limitation of Actions, Section 66.
*354
The early case of Houston Water-Works Co. v. Kennedy,
A careful reading of respondent’s pleadings and the evidence introduced in the case conclusively reveals that respondent’s legal rights were invaded the moment water from the petitioner’s plant began to flow upon her land. Water was wrongfully discharged from petitioner’s plant on to respondent’s land as early as February, 1948’ and continuously flowed thereon until it was diverted by acts of petitioner sometime in September, 1950. Respondent’s cause of action accrued at the time petitioner began wrongfully discharging the water on the land, and not on the date when the extent of the damages to the land were fully ascertainable. The rule discussed in Houston Water-Works Co. v. Kennedy, supra, gives rise to two distinct classes of action. Repondent relies on the case of Baker v. City of Fort Worth,
The rule announced in Houston Water-Works Co. v. Kennedy, supra, has been quoted in the following cases: Austin & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Anderson,
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed and that of the trial court affirmed.
Associate Justice Wilson dissenting.
Associate Justice Smedley not sitting.
Opinion delivered May 26, 1954.
Rehearing overruled June 16, 1954.
