166 Ind. 149 | Ind. | 1905
—A chain of three lakes in Marshall county extends generally east and west for a distance of about three and one-half miles. The chain has Lawrence lake
• This action was commenced in 1891 to recover damages for the loss of water-power which appellee claims to own, and alleges appellant wrongfully destroyed by filling up said culvert. Appellee affirms the right to flow and overflow the lands upon which the highway embankment was located, and also that the right to draw water through said culverts had been acquired by him and his grantors by open, adverse, notorious, continuous, and uninterrupted user for more than twenty years before the commission of the grievance complained of under claim of right against the owners of the land.
A complaint in a single paragraph counting on a right by prescription was held good by the Appellate Court on
The third paragraph claims the right to the flow of water through a natural channel having well-defined banks and bed, and seeks to recover damage to his water-power because appellant in 1890 wrongfully filled up said channel, including the culverts therein, and stopped the flow-age of the water to his mill. To each of these additional paragraphs of complaint a separate demurrer for insufficiency of facts was filed and overruled, and then there was filed an answer of general denial, and the six-year statute of limitations. Demurrers were overruled to the latter answers, and replies filed to the effect that the second and third additional paragraphs of complaint embodied and stated, in different legal form, the same cause of action that is stated in the first paragraph of complaint. Demurrers to the replies were overruled. There was a verdict and judgment for appellee.
Under the view we have taken of the ease all the questions embraced within the assignment will be disposed of by our decision of two questions: (1) Can a right by prescription be acquired by adverse user against the fee owner of land impressed with the easement of a suburban public highway, provided the right asserted does not conflict with the lawful rights and usage of the public? (2) Was the cause of action sued on in the second and third paragraphs of complaint the same cause of action sued on in the plaintiff’s original complaint, stated in a different legal form ?
If the first question be answerable in the affirmative, then the additional paragraphs of complaint were properly held good, and, if good, the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict is beyond controversy, and no error was committed in refusing to give appellant’s request number four. If the second be answerable in the affirmative, then the replies to the answers setting up the six-year statute of limitations were good, and the six-year limitation properly held to be inapplicable; then it follows that the court committed no error in giving instruction number two relating to that subject, and to that effect, nor in overruling appellant’s motion to tax to appellee all the costs made in the case prior to the filing of said two additional paragraphs of complaint.
“Subject only to the public easement, the proprietor has all the usual rights and remedies of the owner of a free
The rule is well stated in Perley v. Chandler (1810), 6 Mass. *453, *456, 4 Am. Dec. 159, as follows: “By the location of a way over the land of any person, the public have acquired an easement, which the owner of the land can not lawfully extinguish or unreasonably interrupt. But the soil and freehold remain in the owner, although encumbered with a way. And every use to which the land may be applied, and all the profits which may be derived from it, consistently with the continuance of the easement, the owner can lawfully claim. He may maintain ejectment for the land thus encumbered; and if the way be discontinued, he shall hold the land free from the encumbrance. Upon these principles, there can be no doubt but that the owner of the land can sink a drain, or any watercourse, helow the surface of his land covered with a way, so as not to deprive the public of their easement.”
The court having disposed of the demurrer to the complaint, announces, on page 280, that it will proceed to determine what it regards as the “vital question in the case.” That question is the sufficiency of the evidence to prove the complaint. Having discussed the evidence adduced in support of the complaint, the opinion. concludes as follows: “As we view the matter, the appellee has not shown any right of action by his evidence, and the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.”
In the second appeal (Terre Haute, etc., R. Co. v. Zehner [1902], 28 Ind. App. 229) it was said: “This substituted amended complaint, [upon which the second trial was had] is an exact copy of the complaint set forth in the former opinion of the Appellate Court,” except a few unimportant amendments, and “we think this court
The verdict is sustained by sufficient evidence, and is not contrary to law. The matters in respect to which the evidence failed in the two former appeals have been abundantly supplied in this.
We find no error. Judgment affirmed.