Brandenberg v. Zeigler

39 S.E. 790, 62 S.C. 18, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 3, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 790 (Brandenberg v. Zeigler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandenberg v. Zeigler, 39 S.E. 790, 62 S.C. 18, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 7 (S.C. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This is an appeal from an order of nonsuit in an action for damages, and to abate a nuisance alleged to result from defendants draining a pond of water which otherwise had no outlet from their lands onto the lands of plaintiffs, by means of a ditch cut by them, thereby overflowing and sobbing about four acres of plaintiffs’ land and rendering it unfit for agricultural purposes, and thereby also causing impure water to percolate into plaintiffs’ well, and rendering it unfit for drinking purposes, and thereby also causing malaria about plaintiffs’ dwelling, to the injury of her health and that of her family. The answer, besides a general denial, sets up a prescriptive right to so drain onto plaintiffs’ land. The Circuit Court in granting the nonsuit held that the water in question was mere surface water, that defendants could deal with it as a common enemy and drain it by ditch onto the plaintiffs’ land, that any injury resulting therefrom was damnum absque injuria, and that the casé was governed by the doctrine announced in Edwards v. R. R. Co., 39 S. C., 472, and Baltzeger v. R. R. Co., 54 S. C., 242.

The exceptions raise practically two questions: 1. Whether the water complained of is surface water. 2. *20 Whether an upper proprietor has the right by artificial drains to collect surface water and thereby cast or throw it upon a lower proprietor to his injury.

1 We agree with the Circuit Court, that the water in question was mere surface water. The complaint described the water as drained from “a large open pond, b'asin or sink, commonly called a savanna, which is naturally and completely surrounded by high hills, and which for the greater part of the time, and especially during rainy seasons, collected and held large quantities of water, which was naturally safely kept and held in said basin, sink or savanna by means of the surrounding high lands and hills; and that before thé grievances hereinafter complained of and mentioned, the waters from said pond, basin or savanna did not and could not reach or in any way effect the said lands of plaintiff, &c.” The evidence showed that the only source of supply to this pond or basin was rain falling upon the surrounding high lands which drained over the surface thereof and accumulated in the said basin, from which it had no outlet except by evaporation or percolation, until the cutting of the ditch complained of; that said pond was not permanent, that it was dry at times; that one year it was planted to cotton, and that it was usually planted to rice. Such water is nothing more than mere surface drainage over the face of the surrounding lands sloping to the basin, occasioned by rains, and does not possess the essential characteristics of a water course, viz: a stream of water usually flowing in a definite channel. In a note to Cairo &c. R. R. Co. v. Brevoort, 25 L. R. A., 527, the learned annotator, after collecting many cases on the subject, says: “From all the cases and definitions it would seem that surface water is water on the surface of the ground, the source of which is so temporary or limited as not to be able to maintain for any considerable time a stream or body of water having a well defined and substantial existence.” In the recent case of Lawton v. the South Bound R. R. Co., 61 S. C., the Court quoted with approval the following definition *21 from 24 Ency. Law, 896: “Surface waters are waters of a casual and vagrant character, which ooze through the soil, or diffuse or squander themselves over the surface, following no definite course. They are waters which though customarily and naturally flowing in a known direction and course, have nevertheless no banks or channels in the soil, and include waters which are diffused over the surface of the ground, and are derived from rains and melting snows, occasional outburst of water, which at times of freshet or melting of snows descend from the mountains and inundate the country; and the moisture of the wet, spongy, springy or boggy ground.” Under this definition there can be no doubt that the water which supplied the basin or pond was surface water only, and we think that such water would not lose its character as such simply because the water remained ponded in the basin for a time until it disappeared through evaporation or percolation, leaving the bottom of the basin either dry or in a boggy or marshy condition.

2 We do not agree with the Circuit Court, however, in the view taken as to the second question stated above. There being some evidence tending to show that plaintiff had sustained injury as alleged by the draining of said water by an artificial channel constructed by defendants, which cast the water onto plaintiffs’ lands, where it' would not have otherwise gone, the case ought to have been submitted to the jury. It is clearly settled by the decisions of this Court that the common law rule as to surface water prevails in this State. Edwards v. R. R. Co., 39 S. C., 475; Baltzeger v. R. R. Co., 54 S. C., 245; Lawton v. R. R. Co., 61 S. C. In the case first cited, the Court, speaking by Chief Justice Mclver, said: “Under the common law rule, surface water is regarded as a common enemy, and every landed proprietor has the right to take any measures necessary to the protection of his own property from its ravages, even if in doing so he throws it back upon a coterminous proprietor to his damage, which the law regards as a case of damnum absque injuria, and affords no cause of action.” *22 Under the civil law, by reason of the location, the upper estate has an easement or servitude in the lower estate for the natural flow of surface water from the former to the latter, so that the owner of the lower or servient estate cannot lawfully obstruct such flow. On the other hand, the common law does not recognize any such easement or servitude, and in view of the owner’s dominion over his property, permits the proprietor of land to protect his property from the invasion of surface water. Under this principle of the common law, the three cases cited above were decided, each case involving the question whether a proprietor of land may not lawfully refuse to receive surface water upon his premises by embankment against. We deal now with a different question. In the case of Barkley v. Wilcox, 86 N. Y., 140, 40 Am. Rep., 519, the Court said: “There is a manifest distinction between casting water upon another’s land and preventing the flow of surface water upon your own.” In that dase the Court recognized the principle that “the owner of wet and spongy land cannot by drains or other artificial means collect surface water into channels, and discharge it upon the land of his neighbor to his injury;” saying further: “this is alike the rule of the civil and common law.” In the cases cited, the Court, enforcing the common law rule, held that no action would lie for cutting off the flow of surface water, even though injury was incidentally done to another. In Massachusetts, where the rule of the common law is enforced, the same distinction is recognized; for in the case of Rathke

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 790, 62 S.C. 18, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandenberg-v-zeigler-sc-1901.