Beauchamp v. Taylor
This text of 111 S.W. 609 (Beauchamp v. Taylor) 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.
Opinion
(after stating the facts). —
Plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that he could not protect himself from the water caused to be backed upon his land by the levee. Defendant offered evidence tending to show that he could, at an expense of from $15 to $30, have drained the back water off [96]*96his land. On this evidence, the court gave instructions asked by both parties, to the effect that if plaintiff could not have protected himself from damage by draining the water off his land at a reasonable expense, he was entitled to recover; but was not entitled to recover if he could have drained the water off at a reasonable expense. Both parties adopted this theory of law of the case and are concluded thereby.
Instruction number 8 instructed the jury as follows, to which defendant saved an exception:
“The court instructs the jury that even though you find from the evidence in the cause that the waters which collected on plaintiff’s land west of and adjacent to the levee in controversy, if any, were surface waters, and even though you should further find that there was and is no natural watercourse extending through the low lands on plaintiff’s tract across the division line between plaintiff’s said tract and defendants’ lands into defendants’ lands, still if you further find that said levee caused the waters during 1902 and 1903 to accumulate on plaintiff’s land and damage his crops for said years, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff, if you further find that plaintiff could not have, at a reasonable cost, drained said waters off from such overflowed area,”
While the owner of land may improve the same by obstructing or diverting surface water, he may not do so in a reckless manner, resulting in injury to another. [Cox v. Railroad, 174 Mo. 588, 74 S. W. 854; Webb v. Carter, 121 Mr. App. 1. c. 154.] The instruction, however, does not predicate plaintiff’s right to recover on the theory that defendants recklessly obstructed the surface water, resulting in injury to plaintiff, but authorizes a recovery if defendants obstructed it at all, however careful he may have been in doing so. In McCormick v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 1. c. 437, the Supreme Court said: “The general rule, however, is that [97]*97either municipal corporations or private persons may so occupy and improve their land, and use it for such purposes as they may see fit, either by grading or filling up low»- places, or by erecting buildings thereon, or by making any other improvement thereon, to make it fit for cultivation or other profitable or desirable enjoyment; and it makes no difference that the effect of such improvement is to change the flow of the surface water accumulating or falling on the surrounding country, so as to either increase or diminish the quantity of such water, which had previously flowed upon the land of the adjoining proprietors to their inconvenience or injury.” The instruction as to surface water is diametrically opposed to this rule and is therefore erroneous.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
111 S.W. 609, 132 Mo. App. 92, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beauchamp-v-taylor-moctapp-1908.