168 Mo. App. 181 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This action was commenced in Knox county but a change of venue was granted and. it was sent to Adair county where it was tried and a, judgment rendered for plaintiff. The parties are neighboring farmers in Knox county and the cause of .action pleaded in the petition is the alleged unlawful and malicious' act of defendants in collecting surface water from their land and precipitating it in a body-on the land of plaintiff to his injury and damage. The prayer of the petition is for the recovery of both compensatory and punitive damages and for a writ of injunction to restrain defendants from continuing the nuisance. The issues relating to the cause at law were tried to a jury and a verdict was returned in. favor of plaintiff which assessed compensatory damages at $126.25 and punitive damages at one dollar.
The issues pertaining to the prayer for equitable relief were tried by the court and a permanent injunction was issued in conformity to the prayer. The court made and filed findings of fact which, being well supported by evidence, we have used in the preparation of our statement of the facts of the case.
The scene of the'events that gave rise to the present controversy was at the intersection of two public roads in Knox county. One an east and west road we
We think the court did not err in overruling defendants’ demurrer to the evidence. We' give full recognition to the rule that surface water is a common enemy against which every landowner must protect himself and that a servient proprietor has no right to require protection at the hand of the dominant proprietor, but that rule never has been applied in a manner to allow a dominant proprietor to collect the excess surface water from his own land and cast it in a body on the servient land. Defendants not only did that very thing but without even a pretense of lawful authority for so doing, wilfully destroyed a public drainage ditch obviously designed 'and used' for the benefit of their own lands as well as those of plaintiff.
The petition states a g’ood cause of action, the rulings on the evidence and the instructions to the jury are free from prejudicial error. The judgment is affirmed.