City of Blackwell v. Murduck

1952 OK 173, 244 P.2d 817, 206 Okla. 466, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 23, 1952
Docket34908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1952 OK 173 (City of Blackwell v. Murduck) 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
City of Blackwell v. Murduck, 1952 OK 173, 244 P.2d 817, 206 Okla. 466, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 624 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

O’NEAL, J.

This is the third time the controversy between Wilbur Mur-duck and the city of Blackwell, Oklahoma, upon the issue of damage to Murduck’s land, is presented to' this court. Murduck et al. v. City of Blackwell, 198 Okla. 171, 176 P. 2d 1002, in which case we held the trial court erred in sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and dismissing plaintiff’s action. In the City of Blackwell v. Murduck et al., 202 Okla. 216, 212 P. 2d 135, we sustained the trial court’s action granting Murduck a new trial after a verdict was returned in favor of the defendant city.

The present action is based on identical allegations in the two previous cases. Upon trial in the instant case, Murduck recovered a judgment against the city of Blackwell in the sum of $8,000, and, from a denial of the city’s motion for a new trial, it appeals. The parties will be here referred to as plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in the trial court; or, in the alternative, as Murduck and the City.

The City contends the present case must be reversed on the following grounds:

(a)That plaintiff’s exclusive remedy was by a condemnation proceeding under the eminent domain law of the State and that the trial court was, therefore, without jurisdiction to enter a judgment upon the jury’s verdict.

(b) That plaintiff failed to sustain the burden of proof that the defendant’s lake caused any injury to the plaintiff’s land.

(c) That the court’s instructions are erroneous, conflicting and prejudicial, and that the court failed to give adequate instructions on the meaning of the terms “proximate cause” and “intervening cause”.

These respective contentions will be answered in chronological order in conjunction with an analysis of the evidence in the record.

A historical resume of the case discloses that the predecessor in ownership of the Murduck farm consisting of 160 acres, located approximately in the northwest corner of Kay county, Oklahoma, in the year 1908 constructed a tile drainage ditch 3,065 feet in length, running from a low point on swamp land to its outlet near the Chikaskia River. The drain was constructed of regular drainage tile ten inches in diameter, laid end to end, leaving interstices at each tile joint. Water could thus enter the tile drain at each joint, as well as seep therefrom. Approximately in the center of the Murduck farm was a tract of low swampy land which had no natural drainage outlet of the surface water draining into the depression. The tile drain for a distance of 3,000 feet was laid to a constant grade of one-tenth of one foot to each 100 feet. The end of the drain, approximately 65 feet thereof, made a more violent grade to the Chikaskia River.

The drainage system successfully drained surface water from the land from 1908 to 1923. The low land thus drained raised better wheat, corn, oats and alfalfa than on plaintiff’s adjoining upland, or on adjoining farms. The great flood of 1923 caused the Chick-askia River to overflow the ridges on plaintiff’s farm, completely filling the *468 lowlands to depths of a few inches to more than eight to ten feet. This water was successfully drained from the land by the drainage ditch, and the land was successfully farmed thereafter to and including the year 1942, producing abundant crops, as it had in previous years. In the latter year, the city lake overflowed the land, and thereafter it was again flooded by high water from the city lake during the years 1944, 1945 and 1947.

The City, in the year 1937, constructed a concrete dam over the Chikaskia river at a point approximately a mile and three-quarters below plaintiff’s farm. The dam was 800 feet long with a spillway near the top center thereof. The elevation of the dam was 1,023 feet above sea level, and the elevation at the bottom of the plaintiff’s swamp land where the intake tile was based was at approximately the same elevation as the city dam. After the gates of the dam were closed, the water in the river formed a lake extending some miles above the plaintiff’s land.

After the construction of the city dam in the summer of 1937, the plaintiff, in company with Mr. Riley and Mr. Alford, made an inspection and examination of the tile drain in six or seven separate places by digging down to the tile, removing several sections thereof, and upon examination found that there was no obstruction in the line and that it contained some clear water. Mr. Alford, a civil engineer, had made surveys of the land in 1908, and the drainage line was laid under his supervision and direction. As stated, he assisted in the examination of the line in 1937 shortly before the gates of the city dam were closed. He checked his original field notes made in 1908 and found that the elevation of the city dam was higher than the intake line of the plaintiff’s drainage system, and determined that the water from the lake, when reaching the dam’s capacity, would enter the outlet end of the drainage line and (flood plaintiff’s land, and so advised plaintiff.

In this investigation in 1937, Alford found that the high flood of 1923 had completely covered the tile outlet with sand and gravel. He removed the sand and gravel and found clear water flowing from the outlet, and, from said investigation, gave it as his opinion that the drainage system at that time was operating successfully. That the drain operated successfully is supported by evidence that plaintiff’s low land was successfully farmed and abundant crops raised after the construction of the dam during the years 1937, 1938, 1939, 1940 and 1941. Thus, from the big flood of 1923 to the summer of 1942, a period of 19 years, the land was sufficiently drained by the drainage system so that plaintiff was able to and did raise good crops from the low land which, however, was subject to some surface drainage by rain. Upon the advice of Mr. Alford, the engineer, that high flood waters receding .from the lake would back up into the drainage system, clog the line with sediment and debris, plaintiff in the summer of 1937 removed the sand and gravel at the outlet end of the line, stuffed some gunny sacks in the end of the tile, and placed an iron drum over the outlet for the purpose of keeping the high water from the defendant’s lake entering into the line and reversing its flow.

The record discloses the water flooded the land in 1942, 1944, 1945 and 1947; and that the water from the lake, from the year 1942 to 1947, completely covered the end of the tile drainage system and the iron drum cover, and has thus remained in that condition to the date of trial. The overflows for the years 1942 to 1947 referred to caused the water to be impounded upon plaintiff’s land, covering, at various times, from 50 to 80 acres thereof, and which water failed to drain away through the drainage tile, as it had prior to said years.

A variable number of acres was inundated annually; the injury to the land had accumulated insidiously. Whereas previously the land was fertile and productive, it now is a fen of stagnant waters.

*469

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Bluebook (online)
1952 OK 173, 244 P.2d 817, 206 Okla. 466, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-blackwell-v-murduck-okla-1952.