Board of Com'rs of Grant County v. Comstock

1932 OK 846, 17 P.2d 501, 161 Okla. 43, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 434
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 20, 1932
Docket21314
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1932 OK 846 (Board of Com'rs of Grant County v. Comstock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Com'rs of Grant County v. Comstock, 1932 OK 846, 17 P.2d 501, 161 Okla. 43, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 434 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

KORNEGAA”, J.

This is a proceeding in error to review the action of the district court of Grant county in granting a mandatory injunction against the county commissioners, and also the township officers and a private citizen, based upon the proposition of disposing of the waters that accumulated along a county highway.

The plaintiffs in error have filed a brief and have made a statement of facts that appears to fairly cover the matters and things that are embraced in the record. This statement' of facts is not controverted by the brief on the other side, except that it appears that the judge viewed the property before granting the mandatory injunction.

The petition was filed on the 15th of October, 1927. It complains of the embankment for the roadway, and also of the construction of the side ditches and of the culverts in the roadway, and of a drain that led from the roadway through the land of a neighbor, who had given permission to open the ditches across his land. In the statement of the evidence, the brief of the plaintiffs in error uses the following language:

“The evidence discloses the following facts, that are not controverted:
“The south half of section 18 and all of 19 is low flat land, difficult to drain. The A., T. &' S. F. Railway runs east and west through section 19, on the half section line, and the roadbed is graded up so that the top of the grade is elevated above the land on each side of the right of way. There are two culverts through the railroad right of way, one is about 100 yards west of the northwest corner of southeast quarter of section 19 and the other is about 80 rods east of the northwest corner of said quarter. Plaintiff Comstock owns the said southeast quarter of section 19, and the southwest quarter of section 19 is spoken of as the Vincent quarter, and the northwest quarter of said section 19 is spoken of as the Higgins quarter and the northeast quarter of 19 "is the B’illman quarter. There is a lagoon or pond near the southeast corner of northwest quarter of section 19. in the pasture and the water falling on said northwest quarter of 19, except the southwest corner flows to the south and east towards the lagoon and from the lagoon onto the railroad right of way. The water falling on the northeast quarter of 19 flows to the south and west towards this lagoon. The water falling on the southwest quarter of section 18 flows to the south and east and the water falling on the southeast quarter of section IS flows to the south and west. The section line running east and west between sections 18 and 19 is a county road and in 1915 and prior thereto this road was practically impassable in wet weather. In that year it was taken over as a county road, and has been graded up by the coun-tv until the crown of the road is higher than the farm land on either side of the road. The county has constructed and is maintaining a culvert under its roadbed at the lowest point in- the land- which happens to be near the half section comer at the northwest corner1’ of the Billman land From the culvert -maintained by- the county. running west to the southwest corno-of section 18, there is a raise in the sut- *44 face of 3.3 feet. (.Testimony of S. A. Hott, comity engineer, page 104 of the record.) The raise in elevation in going east from the culvert to the southeast corner of section IS (or northeast corner of section 19) is a little over a foot. (Testimony of S. A. Hott, county engineer, page 105 of record.) The fall from the culvert in the highway south along the west line of the Billman place to the right of way of the railroad, a half mile away is 4.49’ feet. (Testimony of S. A. Hott, county engineer, page 105 of record. Also testimony of J. A. Lindsey, pago 119 of record.)
“The railway profile shows, beginning at the west line of section 19 and going east, a slight raise for a distance of 700 feet and the water from this part of N. W. 19 flows through the culvert on this section line, continuing east from the 700 foot point, there is a three foot fall to culver,t 111 B in right of way of railroad which is about 100 yards west of northwest corner of S. E. quarter of section 19, and continuing on east from culvert 111B .to culvert 112rA there is a fall of two feelt, and continuing on east from culvert 112A there is a raise of one and one-half foot to a point about 300 feet west of the northeast corner of southeast quarter of section 19 and then a slight fall to said northeast corner. This was the lay of land before the railroad was constructed. (See profile and testimony of S. A. Hott pages 110 and 111 of record and exhibit in record.)
“The testimony of J. W. Moore,. engineer (pages 84 to 944 of record) shows that he measured the elevations from the top of .the railway roadbed, going west from northeast corner of southeast quarter of 19 to the culvert 112iA and the elevation of the roadbed varies practically the same as the surface varied • in the profile.
“There was no 'evidence' offered to -con-' trad'ict any of the foregoing facts and there was no conflict in the evidence. Plan>tiff’s contention was that the evidence showed that- the elevation at the sou-thwest corner of section 18 was two feet higher than the elevation at -the southeast corner of said section 18. and notwithstanding the fact that the land near the center of said section 18 was one and one-lialf feet lower than at the southeast corner, a ditch should be cut deep enough to convey the water on east and not let It flow through the culvert, and on south to the railroad right of way.
“The board of commissioners contended that to cut the ditch deep enough to carry the water on east, will divert the water out of i.ts natural course, and only transfer the grief and damage to another point on tho highway.
“The court accepted the view of plaintiff’s counsel and granted the injunction as appears from -tho record. There was no evidence that deféhdíint Dirige township or Billman had dóiié" or was doing anything in the premises, and in the absence of any testimony as to these defendants, we do not understand the theory upon which they were enjoined.”

The counter statement in the other brief is as follows:

“Tho plaintiffs in error have set out an extensive statement of facts in their brief, and we will not here attempt to go over the same, or make any additional statement, but in the argument presented in this brief we will refer to the facts in connection with •the questions then presented.”

From this statement of facts it axipears that the most relevant question is, whether or no,t a district court should by mandatory injunction direct the plan and operation of a road system. We do not think it necessary to decide the question here as to whether or no-t the plaintiff has any remedy at all for the damages that he alleges occurred to him by virtue of the accumulation of surface water made as a result of building roads. Suffice it to say .that the modern conception of a road is somewhat different from what it was in the early settlement of the country. In the primitive stages, when the horse was the main means of transportation, both of goods and people, natural conditions very frequently sufficed, especially when expenses of creation and maintenance of roads was involved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 846, 17 P.2d 501, 161 Okla. 43, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-of-grant-county-v-comstock-okla-1932.