Compton v. Elkhorn Valley Drainage District

231 N.W. 685, 120 Neb. 94, 1930 Neb. LEXIS 173
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1930
DocketNo. 27420
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 685 (Compton v. Elkhorn Valley Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compton v. Elkhorn Valley Drainage District, 231 N.W. 685, 120 Neb. 94, 1930 Neb. LEXIS 173 (Neb. 1930).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

This is an action against a drainage district for damages to crops on lands within the district. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment on a verdict directed by the court against him at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence.

The defendant, Elkhorn Valley Drainage District, was organized in 1909 under the act of 1907. Laws 1907, ch. 153 (Comp. St. 1922, secs. 1813-1862; Comp. St. 1929, secs. 31-501 et seq.). The district comprises about 55,000 acres in Douglas and Sarpy counties, the majority being in the [95]*95former county. Plaintiff’s land, on which he alleges the damages arose, is the east three-fourths of section 21, township 15, range 10, in Douglas county. It lies in a section of land between the Platte and Elkhorn rivers, though not adjacent to either river. About 1879 the county made a road ditch on the east side of this section and another on the west side thereof. After the drainage district was organized in 1909, it asked the county board for right of way to enlarge the road ditches on the east and west sides of this section so as to make them a part of the drainage system. The county commissioners refused. The district thereupon proceeded to obtain the right through condemnation proceedings in the county court, after which in due time it enlarged and deepened these ditches, increasing their capacity by a considerable multiple. For some years they served the plan to carry other water of the system past plaintiff’s land as well as to aid in draining his land. Gradually they filled up with silt and other matter so that, according to the pleadings, and evidence offered tending to prove his allegations, in 1923, 1924 and 1925 the crops on his lands were damaged by reason of the failure of the defendant to maintain these ditches by cleaning them out so that they might continue to perform their originally intended functions.

There was evidence to the effect that the ditch on the west side of the section in question was so constructed and connected with a portion of the district northwest of this land as to carry the water from approximately a square mile of watershed that formerly drained into the Elkhorn river without coming to the plaintiff’s land; and that the ditch on the east side of plaintiff’s land was so constructed and connected with a portion of the district farther north consisting of approximately 160 acres that also formerly drained into the river without coming to plaintiff’s- land. There was evidence also that when the east ditch was constructed there was. a road bridge -at the intersection at the northeast corner of section 21, under which the water coming to that point passed from the west toward the Elkhorn river. The district removed’ that bridge and filled up the [96]*96road SO' that what water theretofore went east from that point thereafter went down the enlarged ditch along the east side of plaintiff’s land. It was purposed and effected thereafter to carry all of the water reaching this northeast corner of the land from the west down the road ditch on the east side of and past plaintiff’s land along with the water that came from the north.

While some auxiliary propositions are discussed by the parties in their briefs, they agree in substance that the decisive question involved here is whether the drainage district is under a legal obligation to maintain its works by cleaning out the ditches. This, also, was the understanding of the experienced trial judge, whose discussion of the matter, when he decided the proposition in the negative and instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, appears in the record.

In Bunting v. Oak Creek Drainage District, 99 Neb. 843, the district was also formed under the act of 1907 as amended. We affirmed a judgment for damages to plaintiff’s land, holding the district liable for damages caused by its- negligence in the construction of its works. In that case, also, it was held that damages caused unnecessarily by negligence and improper construction .cannot be anticipated and a right of action accrues therefor when the damage occurs.

In Hopper v. Elkhorn Valley Drainage District, 108 Neb. 550 (same defendant as here) we affirmed a judgment for damages to crops. The second point in the syllabus says: “A drainage district corporation organized under the laws of this state, although a. local'corporation clothed with powers, of a public nature, is liable for damages caused, by its negligence in the construction or maintenance of its works.” It seems, however, in that case the damage was caused ¡by the original faulty construction of the ditch and failure to have made a dyke; that the ditch had an angle so abrupt that it would not permit the water to flow through it properly but caused refuse and debris to collect and hold the water back; and that where it emptied into the river a floodgate was so constructed that in high water the river flowed back through the'ditch and damaged Hopper’s land. [97]*97So the question of maintenance was not there involved strictly in the sense it is here understood.

In Miller v. Drainage District, 112 Neb. 206 (while we noté that it arose under chapter 161, Laws 1905, or under that act as amended), we affirmed a judgment for damages to crops by flooding. The opinion holds that the district is liable “for damages caused by its negligence in the construction' or maintenance of its works.” Here, too, the fault would seem to have been in the original construction of the ditch rather than in its maintenance, for, in stating the nature of the case, the: opinion says: “The improvement was constructed partly by digging a new ditch and partly by using the natural channel of what is known as Muddy creek. The negligence alleged is that the defendant district failed to widen and clear the natural channel of Muddy creek so used as a part of the improvement; and that it was negligent in constructing the new ditch narrower and shallower at some points than others; and that the district negligently allowed drifts and debris to accumulate and remain in the old channel of Muddy creek, thus retarding the escape of the flood waters and causing them to run over and upon plaintiff’s lands doing damage to the crops thereon.”

Flader v. Central Realty & Investment Co., 114 Neb. 161, was an injunction suit to prevent the construction of a dam across Oak creek. Oak Creek Drainage District and others intervened. The purpose of the dam was to divert the water of the creek into a lake owned or controlled by the original defendants. The district court denied the injunction. This court reversed the judgment. While the body of-the opinion, in reciting some of the features of the act of 1907, stated among other things' that the law imposes upon the drainage district “the duty of keeping the ditches in repair,” this, idea was not reflected in the syllabus. It was not necessary to a decision of the case and it was used by the court in argument rather than as a vital proposition of law in an action for damages for negligence between a party damaged and the drainage corporation organized under the law.

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McGree v. STANTON-PILGER DRAINAGE DISTRICT
82 N.W.2d 798 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1957)
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252 N.W. 910 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)
Compton v. Elkhorn Valley Drainage District
246 N.W. 340 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 685, 120 Neb. 94, 1930 Neb. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-v-elkhorn-valley-drainage-district-neb-1930.