Bartholomew v. Ward Investment Co.

7 S.W.2d 380, 222 Mo. App. 949, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 113
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 7 S.W.2d 380 (Bartholomew v. Ward Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartholomew v. Ward Investment Co., 7 S.W.2d 380, 222 Mo. App. 949, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 113 (Mo. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

— This is a suit for damages caused by surface water. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained demurrers to the evidence as to all three of the defendants. Plaintiffs took an involuntary nonsuit with leave to set aside the same. Thereafter the court overruled plaintiffs’ motion to set aside the nonsuit and they have appealed. Plaintiffs state that they are prosecuting this appeal solely against the defendant, Kansas City.

The facts show that in 1906 one Sylvester purchased a block of ground located south of iilst street, an east and west thoroughfare, *950 and east of Wornall road, a north and south highway then in Jaekson county and without the limits of the defendant, Kansas City. This ground ran 450 feet southward along the road from the intersection of said street and road and 600 feet east of said intersection along 51st street to Wyandotte street. At this time the tract of land was in the country and was what is described as “acreage” property. The Ward Investment Company and the Country Club owned property known as the Country Club, directly west of and adjacent to Wornall road and west of the Sylvester tract. The natural drainage of the water on" the Sylvester property was from the southwest to northeast. The general trend of the drainage on the Country Club property was in the same direction but at a point opposite 51st Street Terrace, the first street south of 51st street, there was a natural low place into which water drained. Prior to the grading- of Wornall road between this low place and what after-wards became the Sylvester property, the water ran from the low place in a northeasterly direction. It came across Wornall road at about 31st street. Wornall road was graded about forty years before the trial, which was in May, 1926.

Sometime before Sylvester acquired his property, the county constructed a fifteen or eighteen inch culvert under Wornall road, connecting the low place in question with the land to the east of the road. However the east end of the culvert was on the property of the county and ended at a ditch running alongside and parallel to the road. This culvert under Wornall road was about three feet higher than the bottom of the pond and about one and one-half or two feet below the top of Wornall road as graded so that a pond was .formed at the low place west of the road and the water was required to collect in large quantities in the pond before it could flow through the culvert and it thus flowed only after heavy rains. The east end of the drain was located' between 51st street and 51st Street Terrace, about twenty or thirty feet north of the latter street.

Sylvester testified that the south part of his tract of land was much higher than the north; that where the culvert came through Wornafl road his property was higher than the road, and the water ran down a ditch along the side of the road, presumably on the land of the county, and then escaped onto his property, causing a ditch to be washed through it in a northeasterly direction for its entire length of 600 feet. This ditch emptied into a large sink hole at 51st and Wyandotte streets. He complained to a representative of Country Club in reference to the matter but- it took no action and after two or three storms he cemented up the end of the culvert. This caused the water to be backed up onto the Country Club proper, and a representative of the Club protested to the witness. About six months after the witness stopped up the culvert, he reopened it, This was *951 about eighteen years before the trial. Afterwards he laid a drain pipe fifteen or eighteen inches in diameter along the ditch that had been washed across his property. He did not think that he directly connected tire pipe with the end of the culvert but he laid it in such a manner that the water coming through the culvert would flow into his drain. Subsequently someone made a direct connection between the culvert and the drain. After laying the drain through his property, Sylvester graded up the low places in his land. He filled it in to a height of ten or fifteen feet at the lowest place, which was at the northwest corner of the property. At this point he brought it to the level of Wornall road. After the fill was made, the drainage remained as it had before, that is, toward the northeast. No one other than Sylvester had anything to do with the laying of the drain pipe on his land or with the filling up of the land.

In 1916 Sylvester sold the property to one Parker and in the year 1922 the property, or at least a part of the same, was acquired by the Bingham Building Company. This company erected several duplex apartment buildings along 51st street, facing- north thereon, in April of that year. One of these duplex apartments was situated about 200 or 300 feet east of Wornall road and was the sixth building therefrom. This building was acquired by plaintiffs in March, 1923. It appears that the drain laid by Sylvester ran immediately under that part of his land upon which subsequently the house owned by plaintiffs was erected. The drain was laid so deeply under the house that in digging the basement it was not discovered, and the Bingham Investment Company and the plaintiffs knew nothing of its presence until it burst under plaintiffs’ house in September, 1923, causing damages to the same. This suit is to recover damages caused by the bursting of the drain at that time and place.

Sylvester testified that he did not know what was the natural drainage of the water from the Country Club property originally and before the county bifilt Wornqll road; that he did not think that the water ran at that time where the culvert was afterwards constructed under the road but thought it ran north to 51st street, because that was the low place. Another witness of plaintiffs testified that “if the road had not been put in there all that water from the •surrounding country and to the north and to the west and to the south would have drained down and across just about where the culvert was.” Whether the natural drainage from the low place on the Country property was where the culvert was placed or several feet to the north thereof at 51st street, there is nothing to show that after the, water arrived upon what afterwards became the Sylvester tract, it did not naturally flow, in whole or in part, over that part of the property where plaintiffs’ house now stands. The evidence was that plaintiffs’ house is northeast of the pond and that “surface waters *952 east of Wornall road right now drain generally right down across this (plaintiffs’) property.”

Tt. appears that the defendant city extended its limits in 1908. There is no evidence that it did anything in reference to the situation there until five or six years before the trial ivhen some fire engines of the city were seen pumping the water from the pond over Wornall road into 51 st street, which street was then" paved. It appears that the city at no time disturbed the culvert or the Sylvester drain connected thereto. In fact, there is no evidence that after Sylvester laid the drain it was disturbed between plaintiffs’ house and the pond hv anyone unless the culvert, and the drain were connected together after that time. The evidence shows that none of .defendants disturbed the contour of, or the natural drainage upon, the Country Club property. The drain pipe burst after a very heavy rain storm.

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Related

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93 S.W. 351 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.2d 380, 222 Mo. App. 949, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartholomew-v-ward-investment-co-moctapp-1928.