Conklin v. City of Des Moines

184 Iowa 384
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 30, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 Iowa 384 (Conklin v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conklin v. City of Des Moines, 184 Iowa 384 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

1. Waters and watercourses: diverting water from natural drainage. Plaintiff is the owner of a 44-acre tract of land, located south of the Rock Island railroad tracks and east of Thirtieth Street in the city of Des Moines, which is used for agricultural purposes. Considerable land lying northwest thereof was formerly low and subject to overflow. In pgpy or 1878, the owners of this low land, including plaintiff, for the purpose of draining the same, by joint contribution constructed an open ditch from a point near the railroad, southeast a distance of several miles, intersecting with Four Mile Creek. In 1905, the defendant city constructed what is known in the evidence as the Seventh Ward, or Fraley, Ditch, commencing with and extending through some large ponds north of the railroad, and terminating at a culvert on the north side thereof, immediately opposite the open end of the joint private ditch Above mentioned. ■ This ditch was of considerable length, and crossed numerous lots in the city not owned by it. Originally, the ponds drained by the Fraley Ditch covered considerable territory, and, during the rainy season, contained much water, which, after such quantity as could, in the natural course of drainage, flow out, gradually disappeared during the dry season, by the process of absorption and evaporation. In 1909, the board of supervisors of Polk County established a drainage district, the boundaries of which included the plaintiff's, with other, lands south and north of the railroad track. The ditch constructed as a part of this improvement commenced at the outlet of the [386]*386Fraley Ditch, and extended southeasterly, substantially along the line of the private ditch above referred to, intersecting with, and emptying into, Four Mile Creek. We gather from the evidence that this latter ditch effectually drains plaintiff’s, and the other lands, in the vicinity thereof.

This action was brought to recover damages caused by the alleged increased quantity of water thrown upon plaintiff’s land by the Fraley Ditch, and also the amount assessed against the same for her portion of the cost of the public drainage improvement. The court sustained defendant’s motion, made at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, and directed the jury to return a verdict in its favor.

I. One of the grounds of the defendant’s motion was that the evidence failed to show that the negligence or alleged wrongful act of tlie defendant in constructing the Fraley Ditch was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s damages, or that she would not have suffered to the same extent had this ditch not been constructed. The evidence, however, as above stated, showed that the ponds drained by the Fraley Ditch covered a considerable area, and, at certain seasons of the year, large quantities of water gathered therein; that, while a small part of this water may have ultimately passed into the private ditch, and may have occasionally overflowed a small portion of plaintiff’s land, yet the jury may well have found that the amount of water thrown thereon by the Fraley Ditch was greatly increased, that same was diverted from the natural course of drainage, and that the value of her land, for purposes of cultivation, was materially impaired.

The law is well settled in this state that the dominant owner may, by discharging the same upon his own land into a natural watercourse, drain surface water upon the land of the servient owner, but cannot gather large quantities of water out of the ordinary and natural course of [387]*387drainage, and discharge the same upon the servient estate, to its substantial damage, in largely increased quantities, or at a different place or in a different manner than it would usually and ordinarily have gone, in the natural course of drainage. Kaufman v. Lenker, 164 Iowa 689; Obe v. Pattat, 151 Iowa 723; Martin v. Schwertley, 155 Iowa 347; Valentine v. Widman, 156 Iowa 172; Jontz v. Northup, 157 Iowa 6; Miller v. Hester, 167 Iowa 180; Pascal v. Hynes, 170 Iowa 121; Thomas v. City of Grinnell, 171 Iowa 571; Cowley v. Reynolds, 178 Iowa 701; Lamb v. Stone, 178 Iowa 1268; Pascal v. Donahue, 170 Iowa 315; Durst v. Puffett, 181 Iowa 14; Brightman v. Hetzel, 183 Iowa 385; Pester v. Smith, 167 N. W. 580 (not officially reported).

Whether a largely increased quantity of water,-diverted from its natural course, was gathered into the Fraley Ditch and discharged upon plaintiff’s land in such- a way as to overflow and injure the same, were questions of fact for the jury, and plaintiff was entitled to have the same submitted thereto. Abundant evidence was -offered tending to show that, before the construction of' the Fraley Ditch, but a small part of plaintiff’s tract was subject to overflow, and that thereafter, a large portion thereof was frequently overflowed and rendered unfit for cultivation.

2. Waters and watercourses: surface waters: damages for non-permanent overflow. II. A further ground of defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was that no evidence was offered from which the amount of plaintiff’s damages, if any, could have been determined by the jury, and that the evidence sought to be introduced upon this point was not based upon the proper measure thereof. The measure of damages, where the nuisance is of a permanent character, is ordinarily the difference in the value of the land immediately before and immediately after the creation of the nuisance. The rule as applied to this class of cases is fully discussed in Irvine v. City of Oelwein, 170 Iowa 652, 655, and City of Ot[388]*388tumwa v. Nicholson, 161 Iowa 473, and need not be further considered in this case.

Plaintiff sought to offer evidence to show that her lands were permanently damaged by the Fraley Ditch, but the court expressed doubt as to the true measure of damages, and requested counsel to proceed with some other branch of the case until the court was further advised. Counsel for plaintiff acquiesced in this suggestion, and did not again seek to introduce evidence upon this point. The court did not, as counsel for plaintiff asserts, exclude the testimony offered, and made no final ruling thereon. Counsel, if he believed same admissible, should have again called the matter to the court’s attention, and obtained a final ruling on the point.

Plaintiff did, however, attempt to introduce evidence tending to show depreciation in the rental value of the land; but, upon objection of counsel, this evidence was excluded by the court. Some of the questions propounded were, perhaps, not technically correct, but came fairly within the rule. This testimony should have been admitted. Whether plaintiff was entitled to recover damages upon the theory of a permanent injury to her land or not, she was, if she elected to sue therefor, entitled to recover the depreciation in the rental value of her premises. Hollenbeck v. City of Marion, 116 Iowa 69, 79; Risher v. Acken Coal Co., 147 Iowa 459; Hastings v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 148 Iowa 390, 395.

Evidence was received tending to show that the rental value of the land prior to the construction of the ditch was $3.50 an acre, and that, except for one year, plaintiff thereafter received this sum as cash rent; but it is claimed that the land was not cultivated one year because of the constant flooding thereof from the Fraley Ditch.

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184 Iowa 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conklin-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1918.