Cornett v. Hebert

31 So. 2d 446, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 460
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1947
DocketNo. 2911.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 So. 2d 446 (Cornett v. Hebert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornett v. Hebert, 31 So. 2d 446, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 460 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

This is a suit for injunction, both mandatory and prohibitory, in which the plaintiff seeks to have the defendant ordered to remove a dam or obstruction which he alleges has been constructed by the defendant on his own property at a point where a large culvert situated underneath an irrigation canal takes the drainage water from his property.

Plaintiff alleges that his property and that of the defendant are contiguous; that his property lies directly north of that of the defendant; that it is higher than the defendant's and that the natural flow of water, or the drainage from his property, is to the south and therefore the defendant's property owes his property the servitude of drain. He then sets out that defendant has placed a dam or obstruction on his property at the point where it interferes with and impedes the natural drainage and seeks by injunction to have the dam removed and the defendant enjoined from further obstructing his drainage.

In the alternative he alleges that in the event it should be found that the natural drainage of his property is not from north to south and consequently over that of the defendant, then that he has acquired a right of servitude through a shallow ditch over and across the defendant's property which has been in existence for over ten years and he pleads the acquisition of that servitude by prescription.

Coupled with his demand for injunction, and in the alternative for a recognition of the servitude claimed by prescription, plaintiff presents a demand for damages to his crops which he avers has been caused by the illegal acts of the defendant in placing the said dam or obstruction which, having interfered with his drainage, caused the water to remain on his property and resulted in the loss of his work in seedplanting on a number of acres adjoining the defendant's property, The demand is for the total sum of $280.84.

The defendant for answer denies that the natural drainage of plaintiff's property is over his and contends that the ditch on his property through which his water is conveyed to the large culvert underneath the irrigation canal is an artificial drainage. He denies that he constructed a dam on his property as alleged by the plaintiff, and which impedes the drainage of plaintiff's property and denies also that plaintiff has suffered any such damage as he complains of as any damage which may have occurred had occurred prior to the time his alleged cause of action arose.

The trial judge after hearing the case awarded judgment in favor of the defendant holding that the drainage which plaintiff contends is a natural drainage is artificial and further, that the water which remains on the property of plaintiff at the point complained of does so because of a low spot which is "saucer shaped" as he expresses it, and from which, naturally the water cannot drain. He rejected the plaintiff's demand and this appeal was taken.

The evidence shows that the properties lie next to each other and are separated by an irrigation canal which supplies water for irrigating rice fields in that neighborhood. On the plaintiff's property, in the southwest corner, which is the portion we *Page 448 are concerned with in this suit, there is a shallow field drainage ditch running in a southwesterly direction towards the irrigation canal. When this ditch reaches the canal the water which flows in it is conveyed through a large 12 inch iron pipe placed underneath the canal. This as we understand, is the usual method by which properties are drained underneath such canals.

We entertain but little doubt that the natural drainage of the plaintiff's property, particularly this part of it, is from north to south and consequently towards the irrigation canal and on to the defendant's property on the south. If that is so defendant's property owes the plaintiff a servitude of drainage under Article 660 of the R. C. C. which reads as follows: "It is a servitude due by the estate situated below to receive the waters which run naturally from the estate situated above, provided the industry of man has not been used to create that servitude." The Article then goes on to provide that "the proprietor below is not at liberty to raise any dam, or to make any other work, to prevent this running of the water" and "the proprietor above can do nothing whereby the natural servitude due by the estate below may be rendered more burdensome." If we are correct in saying that there is a natural drainage from the plaintiff's to the defendant's property then the provisions of that Article of the Code are those which have to be applied.

It is established by the testimony of at least seven or eight witnesses, one a civil engineer, and the others farmers of the neighborhood who are familiar with the property, that the natural drainage is from north to south and consequently from plaintiff's property on to the defendant's. Jasper L. Bourgeois, civil engineer, took the levels on the plaintiff's property in November of last year and made a contour map, which has been filed in the record. According to his testimony and his map it is plainly shown that the elevations on the plaintiff's property are to the north and that the slope is towards the south and therefore towards defendant's property.

Plaintiff introduced six other witnesses, all laymen, some of whom had cultivated his property and some that of the defendant and their testimony, is all to the effect that the natural drainage flow on the plaintiff's property is to the south. As a matter of fact the defendant's own testimony could be construed to the same effect, for although he had denied in his answer that he had constructed the dam on his property, he admits on the witness stand that he did and states further in justifying his action that if he tore the dam down or removed it, the water from plaintiff's land would flow over his land. Defendant introduced the testimony of a civil engineer by the name of Gus Quinn who evidently did not prepare himself to testify in the same manner that the other civil engineer had and who said that it would be difficult for him to say what direction the water flowed on plaintiff's property. Obviously his testimony, which is of a negative character, is not sufficient to overcome all the other testimony on this point in the case.

It is also contended by the defendant that the drainage is not naturally to the south on the plaintiff's property and that it is only made so because of the ditch which extends for a considerable distance in the southwest portion of the property through which water flows to the pipe under the irrigation canal. This ditch is constantly referred to as a "man made" ditch and we take that to mean that it is an artificial ditch made by plaintiff or some one before him and that even though the drainage would be natural in that direction, this ditch has rendered the servitude which the defendant's property owes to the plaintiff more burdensome, a thing which the plaintiff could not do under the provisions of the Article of the Code with which we are concerned.

From the testimony in the case we conclude that this is not such a ditch as is contemplated under the Article of the Code to make the servitude more burdensome. Mr. Bourgeois, the civil engineer, locates that ditch on his contour map and he marks it as a "shallow field drainage ditch." According to the testimony of a former owner of plaintiff's property, it appears that this ditch was dug by him more than 20 years ago not only across the plaintiff's property but extending for a certain distance over the property presently owned by the defendant. From the testimony of other witnesses *Page 449

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 So. 2d 446, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornett-v-hebert-lactapp-1947.