Court Opinion

ID: 7093596
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:08:31.573376+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:10.190664
License: Public Domain

Dillon, J.
The questions presented in this case are, in this State, now for the first time to be judicially determined. They are questions of no ordinary interest to the jurist, and of no ordinary importance to the citizen and property owner. In adjudicating them we must duly regard, on the one hand, the just rights of property, and on the other the just demands of agriculture and the improvement of land for farming and agricultural purposes. There is no statute in this State, as there is in- some others, defining or regulating the rights of adjacant owners in respect to ditches or drainage. French v. White, 24 Conn., 170; Thompson v. Treasurer of Wood County, 11 Ohio, 678; Stout v. Freeholders, &c., 1 Dutch (N. J.), 202.)
The rights of the parties are therefore to be determined upon the general principles of the law. Before proceeding to state these as applicable to the case, it is advisable to bring out and define somewhat more definitely the exact nature of the case itself.
The defendant is the proprietor of the higher ground or superior heritage or estate; the plaintiff of the lower and inferior estate. Naturally the water drains or flows from the defendant’s low or slough land, into and upon the like land of the plaintiff.
■The work of the defendant of which the plaintiff complains, is what is termed a mole or underground ditch or drain, about two hundred yards in length artificially constructed, a short distance below the surface in the low or slough land of the defendant, and terminating in an open end or mouth near the, land of the plaintiff, through which mouth it discharges the water, which,'in its course it has received and collected.
With respect to the effect of ditches or drains constructed in this manner (and they seem recently to have become quite common) the evidence tended to show that they increased the flow, of water, concentrating and carry*165ing it off in a body. Some of tbe witnesses would not say that a given tract of land would, on the whole, discharge more water in a year with one of -these mole ditches, than without it; but its effect was said to be to bring water to the surface which otherwise would have remained in or soaked through the ground, and that in this way the amount of water flowing on the surface would be increased.
The evidence would warrant the jury in finding that the defendant’s drain caused an increased amount of water to flow upon and over the plaintiff’s land, standing upon it and injuring it, in at least the amount returned by the jury. There is, therefore, no ground to interfere, because the verdict is against the evidence. If the court did not misdirect the jury in respect to the law, its judgment must be affirmed.
í -m,.™ A¿SsOTface' water. The water in question, it must be remembered, was not a running, natural stream, with a defined and known channel With respect to such waters the principles lW) regulating the rights of adjacent proprie¿orSj are wen settled. They are nowhere more perspicuously and accurately expressed than by Chancellor Kent (3 Com., 439, 440), whose statement of the law on this subject has, on more than one occasion, been approvingly quoted and followed by the English courts. Embrey v. Owen, 6 Exch., 353, 369, per Parke, B.; Wood v. Waud, 3 Id., 775.
And though the ditch in question is underground, we do not deem the water, which it drains or carries, as hidden or subterraneous and unknown, to which class of waters ever since (and indeed before) the well known case of Acton v. Blundell, 12 M & W., 325, 354 (1843), a rule very different from that governing ordinary water-courses, has been applied. See, on this subject, some of the cases more or less touching the one in hand, the following: Am. Law Reg., vol. 2 (N. S.), p. 65; Prof. Washburn’s valuable article on “Bights in Subterranean Waters,” and authori*166ties cited; Bassett v. Salisbury Manufacturing Company, 8 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.), 223, with. Judge Redfield’s note and cases, p. 238; Chatfield v. Wilson (correlative rights of adjacent owners respecting percolating water), 28 Vt., 49; S. C., 5 Am. Law Reg. (O S.), 528; Harwood v. Benton, 32 Vt., 724; Roath v. Driscoll (treating subterranean water as part of the earth, as to ownership), 20 Conn., 533; Brown v. Illins, 27 Id., 84; Chasemore v. Richards, 5 Jur. (N. S.), 873; 5 H. & N., 990; Ellis v. Duncan (cutting off underground supply of water from plaintiff’s spring), 21 Barb., 230; S. C., affirmed by Court of Appeals, March, 1864, as stated in Goodale v. Tuttle, 29 N. Y., 459 (1864); Wheatley v. Baugh, 25 Penn., 528; Rauston v. Taylor, 33 Eng. L. & Eq., 428; 11 Exch., 369; Id., 602; Smith v. Kenrick, 62 Eng. C. L., 513; The New Albany and Salem Railroad Company v. Peterson, 14 Ind., 112; Lulher v. Winnisiurmit Company, 9 Cush., 171.
This is strictly a question of drainage, a question relating to surface or superficial percolating waters; which, though customarily and naturally flowing in a known direction and course, have, nevertheless, no banks or channels in the soil.
Now, the cases (see some of them above referred to) hold, and perhaps rightly hold, that with respect to such waters the defendant would have such ownership that he would not be liable, if in the improvement of his land or to supply his own uses, he should appropriate them all, and thereby prevent any portion of them from filtrating through, or percolating into or flowing upon the plaintiff’s land. Chatfield v. Wilson, supra; Rawston v. Taylor, 11 Exch. (H. & G.), 369.
But upon this we need give no definite opinion, as we deem it to be, though a somewhat similar, yet not necessarily the same question as the. one presented in the case at bar.
*167Still, the principle seems to be correct (as held in Rawston v. Taylor, supra), that the owner of .the higher land has an unqualified right to drain for agricultural purposes his surface water, i. e., water flowing in no regular and definite channel, and is not liable to an action by the lower proprietor for so draining it as to prevent any portion of those waters from reaching the land of the lower owner.
Platt, B., in delivering his opinion in the case last referred to, very pointedly said: “This was merely surface water, and the defendant had a right to drain his land, and the plaintiff could not insist upon defendant maintaining his field as a mere water table.”
So with equal force and point, Lewis, Ch. J., in delivering his opinion in a recent and well considered case (Wheatly v. Baugh, 25 Penn. [1855], 528) remarked: “Accordingly the law has never gone so far as to recognize in" one man a right to convert another’s'farm to his ówn use for the purposes of a filter.” And see also opinion of Denio, Ch. J., in Goodale v. Tuttle, 29 N. Y., 459; Broadbent v. Ramsbotham, 11 Exch., 692; Chasemore v. Richards, 5 H. & N., 982; 2 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.), 65, et seq.
This right of the higher owner thus to retain, and if he sées fit, to appropriate all of his surface waters to his own use, is based upon his dominion over the soil which extends indefinitely upwards and downwards, and is adopted as favoring the reclamation and improvement of wet and miry lands.
2.-dis-™?nfinct ofanother. The upper owner having this right in and control over the surface waters, the question more immediately presented in the case at bar now comes: How far may he ” interfere with the natural flow of these waters, if, jnstea(j 0f retaining them as he may on his own land, he chooses to allow them to pass on to the lower land of his neighbor ?
*168.In examining this subject and in seeking to settle it upon proper principles, it would be inexcusable to overlook the doctrines of the civil law respecting it. That law, embodying the accumulated wisdom and experience of the refined. a.nd. cultivated Roman people for over a thousand years, though not binding as authority, is often of great service to the inquirer after the principles of natural justice and right.
By the civil law, certain easements, or services (as they were,.termed by that law), were based upon the relative situation o'f the premises; and the lower land owed to the higher land the service or servitude of being bound to receive all of the water which naturally (without the hand of man) flowed down upon it. The inferior proprietor could not obstruct the flow to the injury of .the superior, proprietor, nor could- the latter make the servitude more burdensome.
These rules are adopted by the- 640th article of the Code Napoleon, relating to “ easements derived from the situation of the premises.” That article may be translated as follows: “ The owner of the lower ground is bound to receive from the higher ground the water which naturally flows-down without -the human hand contributing to its course. The. owner of the lower ground is not permitted to make a dike to prevent such flowing.The owner of the higher ground can do nothing to aggravate the servitude or easement of the lower ground.’’
In Martin v. Jett (12 La., 501, 1838), the civil law rule and the rule under the Code of Louisiani'were carefully considered. The Civil Code of that State provides that where two estates are situated adjacent.to each other, the one below owes to the other- a natural servitude to receive the waters which naturally flow from the estate situated above, provided the industry of man has not been used to create that servitude; the proprietor below is not at liberty *169to raise any dam, or make any other work to prevent this running of the waters, and the proprietor above can do NOTHING whmly the natural servitude may be rendered more burdensome. La. Code, art. 656.
The parties in Martin v. Jett, were owners of adjacent tracts of land, “and,” says the court, “the defendant’s tract, which is situated below, owes a servitude to that of the plaintiff, to receive the waters which run naturally from it.” And commenting on the last clause of art. 656 (above italicised), the court make some very important observations, so applicable to the case in hand, that we feel justified in quoting them somewhat at length.
“If we were to take” remarks the court, “this last clause in its strict literal sense no doubt would remain on our minds, but that the plaintiff, by cutting numerous ditches on his land, leading to a central reservoir, had greatly aggravated the servitude due by the adjoining estate. By means of such canals, the waters which would otherwise remain stagnant in several ponds in different parts of the tract, or gradually flow on to the defendant’s land, exposed to evaporation when spread over a wider surface, are collected and poured in a mass upon his neighbor, and during heavy rains might seriously injure his crop. But it is contended, that although our Code' contains no explanatory article similar to that in the Code Napoleon, which in controversies like the present, directs the tribunals to decide in such a manner as to reconcile the respect due to property with the interests of agriculture, yet such ought to be the interpretation of the article in question [of our Code.”]
“ Let us see to what extent the corresponding article in the Code Napoleon has been thought, by able jurists in France, to authorize any artificial works, by which the servitude might be rendered more onerous, with a view of favoring the great interest of agriculture. Duranton, in *170commenting upon the 640th article of the Napoleon Code, which forbids the owner of the superior estate to do anything which might aggravate the condition of the inferior one, says: ‘ Thus he cannot make on his land any works which would change the natural passage (immission) of the water upon the inferior estate, either by collecting it upon a single point, and giving it thereby a more rapid current, and more apt to carry down sand, earth or gravel upon the land, or by directing upon a point upon the same land a much greater volume of water than it would have received without such works. 1 Dur., No. 164, citing Book 1 Digest, § 1. But the same author proceeds to say, that the owner of the superior estate may make any work upon it necessary, or simply useful to the cultivation of his land, such as furrows in a planted field. He may also, in planting vines, or forming a meadow, make - ditches for the irrigation of the meadow, or to -make his vines more healthy and vigorous.” Id., No. 165.
“We are by no means disposed to give to our (Louisiana) Code such an interpretation as would, in effect, condemn to sterility the superior estate. That every man has the right to clear and cultivate his land cannot be doubted. * * * But it is one thing to clear and cultivate arable lands, and another thing to reclaim lands naturally covered with stagnant waters, in such a way as to throw the mass of water, which toould naturally remain in pools or ponds, upon the lands of one’s neighbor situated below. The Roman law, which, perhaps, forms the best anticipated commentary upon this part of our Code, permitted ditches to be cut by the superior owner, not for the purpose of making water flow upon the adjacent land, but for the purpose of improving, by cultivation, his land, and making it more healthy, and laid down the equitable rule that he ought not to ameliorate his own land to the injury of his neigh*171bors.”. Sic debere quem moliorem agrum facere, ne vicini deterioran facial. Digest I, § 4.
“ Each of the neighbors,” says Pothier (Oust. Orleans, title XIII), “ may do upon his own heritage what seemeth good to him, in such manner, nevertheless, that he doth not inj are the neighboring heritage.”
' The very case now before the court was, as it appears to us, met and provided for by the laws of Justinian. The distinction seems to be between injuries occasioned by strictly agricultural operations, and those occasioned by works designed to reclaim or improve the land. In favor of agriculture, injuries by flowing water done to a neighbor, as the result of ordinary farming operations (as with the plow in raising crops), were hot actionable. But, if one, with the design and purpose of reclaiming and improving bis land, makes ditches upon it and thus, by an increased' flow of water, or otherwise, causes an actual injury to the lower owner, he is liable therefor. Corp. Jur. Civ., 89, tit. 3, §§ 2, 3, 4, 5. See translation of §§ 3 and 4, in note.*
It may be doubted whether the common law courts in this country would adopt what seems to be the rule of the *172civil law, so far as to preclude the lower owner from making, in good faith, -improvements which would have the effect to prevent the water of the upper estate from flowing or passing away. But, even here, the lower owner should properly respect the rights of his neighbor. Earl v. De Hart, 1 Beas. (N. J.), 280.
The courts might npt allow the lower owner to make a dike or embankment, for the express and only purpose of flowing back water upon his neighbor. But if the lower owner, in the way of improvements judiciously made, filled up his land, and this had necessarily or reasonably the conséquential effect to stop the natural passage way of mere surface waters, it would seem to be the opinion of Chief Justice Denlo that such lower owner would not be liable. “ In respect to the running off of surface water caused by rain and snow, I know,” says this able judge (Goodale v. Tuttle, 29 N. Y., 459), “ of no principle which will prevent the owner of land from filling up the wet and marshy places on his own soil for its amelioration and his own advantage because his neighbor’s land is so situate as to be incommoded by it.” This language, however, was, it should be remarked, used with reference to town, and not-country property. And see and compare Earl v. De Hart, 1 Beas. (N. J.), 280; Overton v. Sawyer, 1 Jones (Law), 368.
The rules of the civil law as above shown, clearly support the charge of the court below, and those rules, so far as they deny to the upper owner the right to collect the water in a body, or precipitate it in greatly increased or unnatural quantities upon his neighbor, to the substantial injury of the latter, we deem to be just and equitable. See also, Laumier v. Francis, 23 Mo., 181; Adams v. Harrison, 4 La. Ann., 165; Hays v. Hays, 19 La., 351; Lattimore v. Davis, 14 Id., 164; Washb. on Ease., p. 224, § 16; Delahoussaye v. Judice, 13 La. Ann., 587.
*173And to this extent it is supported .by the weight of authority in the common law courts.
Thus, in the very recent case of Miller v. Laubach, 11 Wright (47 Pa. St. R.), 154 (1864), which was an action for damages, caused by turning water from the land of the defendant to that of the plaintiff, the charge of the court to the jury, that if they found that the defendant collected water from his own land, and turned it in a body upon that of the plaintiff, through an’ artificial channel, to his injury, the latter was entitled to recover the damages he had sustained, was not error. But the owner of land through which a stream flows, may increase the volume of water therein by draining into it, without liability for damages to a lower owner, but he cannot, by any artificial channel, drain off the water standing upon his own land to that of another.
And Kauffman v. Griesmer, 26 Penn., 407, does not decide a different doctrine, though it does not, perhaps, state with exact precision the rule of the civil law; and see, also, Sharpe v. Hancock, 8 Scott, N. R., 46; Cooper v. Barber, 3 Taunt., 99, opinion of Lawrence, J.; Wood v. Waud, 3 Exch., 748; Williams v. Gale (natural watercourse increased by ditching), 3 H. & J., 231; Bellows v. Sackett, 15 Barb., 96, 102. If the recent case of Gannon v. Hargadon, 10 Allen (Mass.), 106, the advanced sheets of which have been obligingly furnished us by the learned reporter, lays down a principle essentially different from those maintained in this opinion, we have only to say that we prefer the view taken by us.
In the determination of this case we recognize the general rule that each may do with his own as he pleases; but we also recognize the qualification, that each should so -use his own as not to injure his neighbor. Sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas.
Now, in this case it was undoubtedly practicable for the *174defendant to have had his drain terminate at a point more distant from the land of the plaintiff, or to have provided a larger reservoir or receptacle for the water, or by side ditches to have distributed the surplus water, as he lawfully might on his own land, and allowed it to flow (as before the mole ditch was made) upon the plaintiff’s land gradually, and from a wider surface.
The court, in substance, laid down the law to the jury to be that if the ditch in question increased the quantity of water upon the plaintiff’s land to his injury, or without increasing the quantity, threw it upon the plaintiff’s lands in a different manner, from what the same would naturally have flowed upon it to his injury, the defendant was liable for the damage thus occasioned, even though the ditch was constructed by the defendant in the course of the ordinary use and improvement of his farm.
Upon the whole, we think, that in this case, the law was properly stated. And in so holding we add that we do not lay down any rule applicable to town or city property See Bentz v. Armstrong, 8 Watts & Serg., 40; Goodale v. Tuttle, 29 N. Y., 459, or (as cases of this kind greatly depend upon their special circumstances) to improvements of a different character.
We recognize the fact (to use Lord Tenterden’s expression) that surface water or slough water is a common enemy which each landowner may reasonably get rid of in the best manner possible; but in relieving himself he must respect the rights of his neighbor, and cannot be justified by an act having the direct tendency and effect to make that enemy less dangerous to himself and more dangerous to his neighbor. He cannot make his estate more valuable by an act which unnecessarily renders his neighbor’s less valuable.
Having, as we have shown, the legal right to retain and control the waters escaping from the ditch, and it being *175doubtless practicable to do so, we cannot but regard tbe act of tbe defendant as unnecessarily injurious to tbe plaintiff. And in so bolding we do not think we unduly abridge of unreasonably narrow tbe right to make drains for tbe improvement or reclamation of low or wet lands. Yery little is gained if tbe same act which dries up one tract of land renders tbe adjoining tract twice as difficult to redeem.
We perceive no error in tbe action of tbe.court, after instructions given but before tbe cause was finally submitted to tbe jury, in allowing tbe plaintiff to withdraw that portion of tbe petition asking tbe abatement of tbe drain as a nuisance.
Affirmed.

Lex 1, §§ 3, 4, Digest 39, 3.
“Sec. 3. Quinlius Mucius says that no action would lie, if a man, for the purpose of cultivating the soil, does some work with the plow, by which water is brought into the premises'of his neighbor. But Trebatius takes out only such eases, where the worh done with the plow was necessary for the purpose of raising crops, the action lying for works designed to improve the ground."
“Sec.'4. Mucius says that ditches made to drain the ground, though performed for agricultural purposes, are not permitted to be made for the purpose of conducting the water into the adjacent premises, because a man must not improve his premises in such a way as to injure his neighbor."
See commentaries on above by Phibaut, System des Pandekten, Riohts., § 589 ; Dr. Maceidoy’s Lehrbuch, &c., § 267, b. Domat (616 Cush, ed.), says: “He who has the upper grounds cannot change the course of the water either by turning it some other way, or rendering it more rapid, or making any other changes in it to the prejudice of the owner of the lower grounds.” And see Bellows v. Saclcett, 15 Barb., 99, 102; Delahoussaye v. Judice, 13 La. Ann., 587 and other Louisiana cases cited in the opinion.