Bolinger v. Murray

137 So. 761, 18 La. App. 158, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 634
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1931
DocketNo. 3837
StatusPublished

This text of 137 So. 761 (Bolinger v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolinger v. Murray, 137 So. 761, 18 La. App. 158, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 634 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CULPEPPER, J.

This is a suit to abate an alleged nuisance created by defendants in the erection of a levee about one thousand feet in length along the south side of a graveled public highway which runs east and west on the section line, dividing plaintiff’s lands on the north from defendants’ on the south. Plaintiff alleges that the natural drainage is from north to south over his lands onto and across the lands of defendants; that the erection of the levee complained of impedes the natural flow of the water, and causes it to become impounded during heavy rains upon plaintiff’s land, to his detriment and injury. He alleges that on or about April 18 or 19, 1929, rain water running across his land southward to the land of defendants was held by the levee thrown up, and thereby prevented from passing over its natural course, the levee holding it on plaintiff’s land; that the water thus impeded was backed up and overflowed about seventy acres of plaintiff’s land and destroyed his young cotton crop, which was being cultivated on the land; also deposited floating logs and brush upon the land. The expense of reconditioning the land and replanting, plaintiff alleges, will, together with the loss to crop due to delay, amount to $1,-000. It is also alleged that the acts of defendants in erecting the levee were malicious, thereby entitling plaintiff to recover punitive damages in the sum of $500, together with $250 as attorney’s fees. Plaintiff prays for judgment ordering the removal of the levee and for a moneyed judgment for $1,750.

Defendants admitted the ownership of the respective lands, their relative positions, and the erection by them of the levee complained of, b.ut denied that the natural drainage across plaintiff’s lands was toward or across that of defendants, although they admit there is a low place, known as Bull bayou, or slough, situated partly on their property and partly on plaintiff’s. Defendants specially deny that the erection of the levee or embankment by them obstructed the natural drainage as alleged, even if the court should find that a natural drainage existed as alleged. They allege that the natural drainage as originally existed has been completely changed -by the construction by the North Bossier levee board of a canal on the east of the lands of plaintiff and defendants and another to the west. The police jury of Bossier parish, it is alleged, constructed á high grade for the gravel road on the section line between the respective properties which also impeded the natural flow. Defendants further aver that plaintiff himself constructed drainage ditches over his lands extending out from Still House bayou on his east across his lands towards Bull slough, through which drainage ditches water can and does back out of and is diverted from Still House bayou over and across plaintiff’s land into the basin of Bull slough during stages of high water, thence finding its way across to defendants’ lands; that as a result of said changes in the drainage system of the vicinity in question all of the water from plaintiff’s lands is concentrated into the drainage ditch excavated by the police jury along the north side of the road, thence it flows to the opening in said road at the bridge where the road crosses Bull slough, and there flows through this opening in a concentrated volume, out, upon, and over defendants’ land from one point, “thereby tremendously increasing the burden, if any there was, which is denied, of the defendants.” Defendants’ nineteenth paragraph of their answer reads as follows: “They show that these canals, drainage, ditches, and the road diverted all of the water on the land of defendants at a point which would not have been the natural destination of the said waters, and increased the volume of the water which would have flowed naturally into, or would have reached any portion of defendants’ adjacent estate.”

Defendants further aver that certain [762]*762stagnant water which rested on plaintiff’s land was drained through these ditches onto defendants’ land, and still further increased their burden. In paragraph 5 defendants John E. and J. W. Murray admit erecting the levee complained of, and state their reasons for doing-so as follows: “* * * For the purpose of protecting it (their property) against extraordinary flow of water caused by building the road, and by the changes made in the natural drainage by the plaintiff; ⅜ * ⅜ that this dammed or stopped up the natural drainage * * * or that it forces the water back over the land of petitioner.”

Defendants denied liability for the damages sued for; also set up reconventional demand for $2,500. - -The grounds alleged on for its recovery are that in 1924 one J. B. Ladd, a tenant on plaintiff’s property, owed defendants $2,500, and plaintiff agreed to collect this sum from Ladd for defendants, and that plaintiff collected this amount but never accounted to defendants for same.

In a well-considered opinion, the learned trial judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and against defendants, ordering them to remove the levee complained of within ten days from the time the judgment became final, and in default thereof that the same be removed at the costs of defendants. The demands of plaintiff were otherwise rejected, as were also defendants’ reconventional demands.

Prom this judgment, defendants appeal.

Plaintiff, J. O. Bolinger, owned the E. ½ of S. E. ¾. of Sec. 24, T. 23 N., R. 14 W., and W. ⅛ of S. E. ⅛ of Sec. 19, T: 23 N., R. 13 W., in Bossier parish. Defendants J. E. and J. W. Murray, owned adjacent to plaintiff on the south section 25, T. 23 N., R. 14, and W. ½ of W. ½ of Section 30, T. 23 N„ R. 13 W. Both plaintiff and defendants were at the time of filing this suit, and had been for some years prior, cultivating their respective lands, or a portion thereof. These lands had formerly been swamp lands subject to overflow and non-cultivatable, except for some ridges or high places here and there about over them. To the east of these swamp lands are the hills, and to the west flows Red river. A natural drain known as Still House bayou comes from the north and courses generally southward through the bottoms near the hills on the east. This bayou passes through the northeastern and eastern portions of plaintiff’s land, and emerges at the southeast corner, where it crosses the public road, over which is a bridge. The bayou thence runs on southward through the extreme east portion of the lands of defendants. Along or near the west bank of this bayou is a ridge- of slight elevation, and just west of the ridge is a depression which many years ago constituted the bed of Phelps Lake, but. which has ceased to exist as a lake due to natural deposits and the system of drainage instituted by the North and South Bossier levee boards. The lands of both plaintiff and defendants, especially those portions directly connected with this controversy, lie within this old lake bed. The lowest point of this lake bed from north to south is what is known as Bull bayou, or slough. According to the map of plaintiff’s engineers, Bull slough, as we shall hereafter call it, has a well-defined course, which begins with a wide .or beaver-tailed spread up in sections 14 and 23, and contracts to a narrower channel running in a southeasterly direction through plaintiff’s E. ½ of S. E. ⅛ of section 24. It then crosses the public road near the southeast corner of the section, and runs southward through defendants’ E. ½ of E. y2 of section 25, and empties into the extension of Still House bayou to the south. According to map of defendants’ engineers, however, this slough has no defined channel; in fact, it is not even shown on this map.

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 761, 18 La. App. 158, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolinger-v-murray-lactapp-1931.