Block v. Franzen

79 N.W.2d 446, 76 N.W.2d 446, 163 Neb. 270, 1956 Neb. LEXIS 133
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1956
Docket33992
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 N.W.2d 446 (Block v. Franzen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Block v. Franzen, 79 N.W.2d 446, 76 N.W.2d 446, 163 Neb. 270, 1956 Neb. LEXIS 133 (Neb. 1956).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

Plaintiffs are the owners and a tenant of a farm of 160 acres. Defendants own a farm of 200 acres adjacent to plaintiffs’ land on the south. A large, landlocked pond is partly on each piece of land, lying across the common boundary. Defendants built a dike along the north side of their land so as to prevent water flowing into the pond on plaintiffs’ land from reaching the area of the pond on defendants’ land.

Plaintiffs petitioned for an injunction restraining the maintenance of the dike and ordering its removal. Plaintiffs prayed for crop damage. Defendants resisted the action and by cross-petition sought an injunction against plaintiffs maintaining dams and ditches on their land, and an order requiring plaintiffs to restore their land to its natural condition.

The trial court granted the prayer of plaintiffs’ petition, assessed crop damage, and denied defendants’ cross-petition.

Defendants appeal. The denial of the cross-petition is not assigned as error.

The amount of crop damage is not challenged as to amount, provided plaintiffs are entitled to recover at all.

We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

*272 We hereafter use the term plaintiffs as owners of the land.

The land to the north of plaintiffs’ land is rolling and hilly. Some of that surface condition is on the north of plaintiffs’ land. The elevation flattens out to the southern portion of plaintiffs’ land.

The pond here involved is described as covering some 50 acres of land. Two-thirds of that area is on defendants’ land. The shore line of the pond on defendants’ land is abrupt and high so that it is relatively permanent. The shore line on plaintiffs’ land does not have that containing elevation. It advanced and receded as the water level in the pond increased or decreased.

The pond has been a permanent body of water through the years, except that in periods of drought it “dried up” on occasion. Witnesses testified that it had been there for many years, and that they had boated, hunted, and skated on it. The pond was shallow; however, it is a fair conclusion that it was deeper on defendants’ land.

In a state of nature surface water came upon plaintiffs’ land in fairly defined waterways from the northwest, near and at the north line; from the north about the center of plaintiffs’ land; and from the north and northeast at the northeast portion of plaintiffs’ land. These waters in a state of nature flowed across plaintiffs’ land and ultimately came to rest in the pond. There the water remained except as it sank into the soil or evaporated.

Many years ago, sometime before 1937, a road was graded along the line east and west between the two pieces of land and through the ponded area. We find no evidence that that road materially interfered with the movement of water from the ponded area on the north to the ponded area on the south. In 1952 the road was again graded and the elevation raised. A 3-foot culvert was placed in the road to permit water to flow from the north portion of the pond to the south por *273 tion. The roadway blocked the flow of water between the two areas except at the culvert.

In 1946 plaintiffs placed an irrigation well on their land at a high point west of the center of the land at the north line, and in connection therewith built laterals and dams to which we shall refer in some detail. They built a lateral to the west and then southwest to their west line. Here it served as a dam to divert waters entering their land and flowing across it in small amounts. They also built a ditch for about one-eighth of a mile from their northwest corner south along the fence line where it connected with an old drainageway to the pond. It appears that it was designed to take care of moderate amounts of water that might reach their lands in that area. Then, east of their west line, they built three terraces running north and south. These were designed to accept greater volumes of water and carry it down the corn rows between the terraces so as to serve irrigation purposes. The runoff from these operations all reached the pond on plaintiffs’ land. There is no showing of a substantial increase of water in volume reaching the pond from this operation.

In times of high runoff of storm water, the greatest volume of water entered plaintiffs’ land in a well-defined watercourse at about the center of the north line. In a state of nature, it then flowed south in an irregular course in a defined channel to about the center of the farm. There it flowed in a diffused course, which in time of heavy rainfall was sometimes 100 yards wide, into the pond on plaintiffs’ land.

Plaintiffs placed a dam across this waterway on the north to carry an irrigation lateral to the east. They placed a flume in the dam to admit the passage of the waters coming from the north. This washed out, in part, in 1948. It has not been fully replaced and it is not necessary to do so for irrigation operations. The evidence is that the remaining portion of this dam in *274 nowise interferes with or accelerates water coming from the north.

Plaintiffs back-furrowed two ridges, 10 corn rows apart, running directly south from this waterway where it entered plaintiffs’ land. Floodwaters washed out the soil between those rows so that there was a new drainageway created in place of the natural one. In the years since, silt in the lower end has been removed and put upon the banks and, as of the time of trial, this drainageway extended to within 200 feet of plaintiffs’ south line. There it empties water into the pond. There is evidence that water, restricted in the width of flow, would result in less sinking into the soil. No witness undertook to say that there was an appreciable increased amount of water reaching the pond as a result of this artificial drain.

In times of excessive rainfall, water coming upon plaintiffs’ land from the northeast flooded the area of their buildings. Plaintiffs built a dam and ditch to divert this water around the buildings. The testimony is that part of this water was used for irrigation. A part was diverted into a road ditch where it flowed south along the east side of plaintiffs’ land. Plaintiffs’ evidence is that it later went back across plaintiffs’ land upon an alfalfa field and pasture and that ultimately the excess went into the pond. Defendants’ expert witness, from elevations of the land which he had determined, testified that this water followed the roadway to the southeast end of the land, then followed a road ditch west into the pond on plaintiffs’ land. In any event, this water of undisclosed amount ultimately reached the pond on plaintiffs’ land. There is no showing that this diversion increased the volume of water flowing into the pond.

When plaintiffs began to irrigate their land they changed the method of farming so as to run corn rows north and south. There was an effort to show that irrigation water reached the pond and increased the volume *275 of water there. That effort failed. Plaintiffs testified that there was no flow-off of irrigation water into the pond. One witness for defendants testified that he saw water ponded on plaintiffs’ land in 1954.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.W.2d 446, 76 N.W.2d 446, 163 Neb. 270, 1956 Neb. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/block-v-franzen-neb-1956.