Brown v. Bessemer Irrigating Ditch Co.

1 Colo. N. P. 286
CourtPueblo County District Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Colo. N. P. 286 (Brown v. Bessemer Irrigating Ditch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pueblo County District Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Bessemer Irrigating Ditch Co., 1 Colo. N. P. 286 (Colo. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

Walter N. Dixon, Judge.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for injuries to her land, alleged to have been caused by the discharge upon it of water from the defendant’s irrigating canal, which escaped by seepage and percolation. She alleges that the defendant is now, and has been since the 4th day of August, 1894, the owner of a large irrigating canal, commonly known as the “Bessemer Ditch;” that the headgate of said canal is on the south side of the Arkansas river, a distance of about ten miles up said stream from the land of plaintiff; that said ditch extends from said headgate in a general southeasterly direction down the valley through which said river flows to a point many miles below the land of the plaintiff, and is distant about one mile from plaintiff’s land at the nearest point of approach; that said ditch is constructed through a loose, gravelly and porous soil; that the surface of the ground lying between said ditch and plaintiff’s land has a general slope towards the Arkansas river, and towards the land of the plaintiff; that there is underlying the gravelly surface of the land between defendant’s ditch and plaintiff’s land at a depth of a few feet, a bed of shale, which has the same slope towards the river as has the surface; that continuously every year since August, 1894, and at all seasons of the year, the defendant has diverted a large volume of water from the [289]*289Arkansas river into and through said ditch; that by-reason of the loose, gravelly soil through which said ditch is constructed, large volumes of water have escaped continuously since August, 1894, from said ditch, through the bottom and sides thereof, by seepage and percolation, and were carried along the bed of shale above referred to, and broke out and came to the surface in running streams on the land of plaintiff, and on adjacent land, from which said waters were carried through ravines onto plaintiff’s lands. The waters thus discharged upon the land of the plaintiff, are alleged to be the cause of the injuries complained of, and damages are claimed in the sum of twelve thousand dollars. The complaint contains no averment whatever of negligence, either in the construction of the ditch, or in its maintenance, or in its operation.

To this complaint defendant has filed an answer containing a general denial and ten special defenses. To the special -defenses plaintiff has interposed demurrers, of which but two will require any extended consideration, namely, those addressed to the third and fourth special defenses, which plead the statute of limitations. (2 Mills Ann, St. § 2900.) The third special defense alleges that the defendant’s canal was constructed and set in operation in the year 1889, and proceeds upon the theory that the statute of limitations begins to run from that date, and that, therefore, the present suit, which was instituted in the year igoo,; is barred. The fourth special defense alleges that the discharge of water upon the plaintiff’s land and the consequent injury began more than six years prior to the institution of this suit, and proceeds upon the theory that the statute of limitations [290]*290in such cases begins to run at the time of the first apparent injury.

To avoid the statute, counsel for plaintiff contended in argument that the defendant’s canal constitutes a continuous nuisance, giving rise to a new cause of action on each successive day until it shall be abated, and that, therefore, plaintiff is entitled to recover for all injury inflicted during the six years next preceding the institution of her action. The principal case upon which they rely apparently proceeds upon this theory. I do not think this position is tenable upon any theory of the law.

Whenever, undér the sanction of the law and in the exercise of a franchise granted by the sovereign power of the state, a work of any character is constructed, maintained and operated with requisite skill and care, as long as the legal right to maintain and operate it exists, it cannot be a nuisance in the legal sense of the term, nor can the principles of law relating to nuisances be applicable thereto.

If in the exercise of the rights and privileges granted by the provisions of the constitution and statutes of this state relating to irrigation, an irrigating canal be lawfully constructed, although it be built with the utmost skill, and be maintained and operated with the highest degree of care, nevertheless, if through natural causes, water escapes therefrom by seepage or percolation to the injury of adjoining or adjacent lands, undoubtedly the owner of such lands will be entitled to compensation for the injury thus sustained. But his right of action cannot be predicated upon any theory that the canal is a nuisance, for the injury which he has-sustained is an injury, the infliction of which is expressly authorized [291]*291by the sovereign power. Being a lawful injury, his right of action must árise under the 15th section of the bill of rights, (1 Mills Ann. St. § 288) which declares that private property shall not be taken or damaged for public or private use without just compensation. (Colo. Const. Art. 2, § 15.)

In the case of the Denver City Irrigation & Water Co. v. Middaugh, 12 Colo. 434, it appears that Middaugh, the plaintiff below, was the owner of a certain tract of land, through which the defendant company in the years 1878 and 1879 constructed a canal, extending from the Platte river to its- water works; and in February, 1879, it commenced proceedings to condemn a right of way through, across and over certain lands of the plaintiff for the construction of certain canals, lakes and reservoirs. Said proceedings resulted in the condemnation of a portion of the plaintiff’s land, for which he was awarded compensation for the land taken, and for damages to that portion of his lands not taken, which said sums were received and accepted by the plaintiff. Subsequently plaintiff brought suit against the defendant for injuries to his remaining lands alleged to have been caused by reason of the fact that the construction of the canal and reservoir of the defendant was so negligently and unskillfully done that the water percolated, penetrated and ran through the banks and bottom thereof, over, under, through and upon the plaintiff’s land, by reason whereof the plaintiff was materially damaged.

The important question in the trial below, and the question upon which the case turned in the supreme court, was as to what elements of damage had been foreclosed by the condemnation proceedings. [292]*292The trial judge instructed the jury “that the plaintiff' could not recover for the damages in fact allowed by the jury in the county court.” They were also instructed that the law presumed that all past, present and future damages which the improvement could cause, so far as the same might have been reasonably foreseen or anticipated, were included in the award of the jury in the condemnation proceedings. Under these and other instructions the jury were left, however, to determine whether the damages claimed might have been reasonably foreseen or anticipated by the jury in the condemnation proceeding, and, if not, they were instructed that the appellee might recover for such damages in this action as well ás for damages arising from unskillful or ‘ negligent construction or use of the ditch or reservoir.”

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Related

Heard v. Proprietors of Middlesex Canal
46 Mass. 81 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1842)
Mills v. County Commissioners
108 Mass. 363 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1871)
Davis v. City of New Bedford
133 Mass. 549 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1882)
Denver City Irrigation & Water Co. v. Middaugh
12 Colo. 434 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Colo. N. P. 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-bessemer-irrigating-ditch-co-colctyctpueblo-1902.