Crawford v. Miller

2 Ohio App. 244, 19 Ohio C.A. 421, 1913 Ohio App. LEXIS 132
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 Ohio App. 244 (Crawford v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Miller, 2 Ohio App. 244, 19 Ohio C.A. 421, 1913 Ohio App. LEXIS 132 (Ohio Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

This action was brought by the plaintiff, Matthew Crawford, against the defendants, John I. Miller, Ross Hamilton, Gilbert J. McKee and the commissioners of Coshocton county, to obtain a temporary restraining order restraining the defendants and each of them from building, erecting or constructing a levee as described in the petition, until the final hearing of this cause, and, upon the final hearing, to obtain a perpetual injunction as prayed for in the petition.

The plaintiff alleges that he is the owner of the real estate described in the petition; that the lands are farming lands of great value and adapted to the growing of corn, wheat, grass and other farm [245]*245crops; that the defendant Gilbert J. McKee is the owner and in possession of the lands described in said petition, which lands adjoin the lands of said plaintiff on the east and border on the Walhonding river, hereinafter mentioned.

Plaintiff further avers that his said lands are bounded on the east by the lands of said Gilbert J. McKee and on the south by the Walhonding river and the Walhonding canal, which canal was abandoned by the state of Ohio about the year 1896; that the defendants Henry Clark, J. C. Crile and J. H. Elder are the duly qualified, elected and acting county commissioners of Coshocton county, Ohio; that the said Walhonding river has an uninterrupted-flow along its natural watercourse except for a dam in said river heretofore constructed and maintained by the state of Ohio and the department of public works of said state of Ohio, said dam being known as the Six Mile Dam in said Walhonding river; that the abutments erected at each end of said dam, as a protection and support therefor, are. several feet higher than the top of said dam, to-wit, about 12 feet; that the plaintiff’s said lands lie north and west of said dam, and said river flows in an easterly direction along said plaintiff’s said lands; that the defendants John I. Miller, as superintendent of the department of public works of the state of Ohio, and Ross Hamilton, as superintendent of the construction of a certain levee, as officers of the department of public works of the state of Ohio, and Henry Clark, J. C. Crile and J. H. Elder, as commissioners of the county of Coshocton, Ohio, threaten and are about to erect and will build and [246]*246construct a levee from the north abutment of the said dam, in a northwesterly direction across the lands of the said Gilbert J. McKee to a point on the southeast corner of the lands of said plaintiff, and will so construct said levee unless restrained by this court; that said levee, so to be constructed by said defendants, will extend to a height of 4.3 feet above the plaintiff’s said lands at the lowest point; that in case of a flood or sudden rise of the waters of said river it will cause said river or a part thereof to overflow plaintiff’s said lands before the same will flow over the levee erected by said defendants, and said levee will obstruct the natural flood channel of said river and cause said river to flow in- a new and different flood channel on and over the lands of the plaintiff; that said defendants in constructing said levee are doing so without due process of law and without any license, sufferance, consent or agreement, contract or grant with or from the plaintiff, who is the owner in fee simple of said premises, and said defendants are so threatening to overflow and appropriate said new flood channel,. without acquiring the right so to do by any process of law and without making or paying to the owner thereof any compensation therefor, by placing on it in the event of a flood in said river the burden of furnishing a channel for said flood water to pass without said construction of said levee, which will impede the natural and regular flow of said flood water, the land of the plaintiff would not be subjected to said burden; that a large part of said premises, that is now well suited for the growing of said crops and which is and for a long time has [247]*247■been used therefor at great profit to the plaintiff, will, by the erection of said levee, be overflowed by the waters of said river and rendered unfit for growing corn, wheat, grass and other crops, and rendered worthless for farm purposes; that as the water flows in its natural course over the depression where defendants threaten to construct said levee, it spreads out over a large tract, about one-half mile in width, and again returns to the channel of said river without overflowing the lands of plaintiff; that said levee is permanent in its character and will obstruct the flow of the flood water of said river in its natural flood channel and cause said waters to flow on and over said premises of plaintiff, to the irreparable damage of plaintiff; and plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law for the wrongs herein complained of.

The plaintiff prays that a temporary restraining order be allowed, etc., and, upon the final hearing, that a perpetual injunction be granted, etc.

A temporary restraining order was granted by the probate judge of Coshocton county as prayed for, a motion by defendants to the common pleas court to dissolve and set aside said temporary restraining order was granted and the plaintiff appeals to this court. Thereupon the defendants, the county commissioners of said Coshocton county, filed their answer, in which they say, in substance, that they admit that plaintiff is the owner of the lands described in the petition; that a part of the Walhonding canal was abandoned as alleged in the petition; that they, Henry Clark, J. C. Crile and J. H. Elder, are the duly elected, qualified and act[248]*248ing commissioners of Coshocton county, Ohio. They further admit that a dam has been constructed and maintained by the state of Ohio as alleged in said petition, and they deny each and every other allegation.

Said commissioners, further answering, say that they have entered upon their journal an entry to the effect that $1,000 be paid to the state of Ohio, and the state of Ohio is to take care of a right of way for the levee proposed to be constructed by the state of Ohio; that said $1,000 be paid when the levee is completed; that said' participation in the construction of said levee is considered by the commissioners of public importance and that, if said levee is not constructed that portion of the highway leading from Warsaw to Coshocton and beginning on the Wilson lands and running south toward Coshocton will be greatly damaged. They ask that said action as to them may be dismissed' and that they be permitted to carry out their part of the construction of said levee.

The defendants J. I. Miller and Ross Hamilton, on October 13, 1913, filed their joint answer, in which, in substance, they admit the ownership of the lands by the plaintiff described in the petition and that a part of the Walhonding canal was abandoned by act of the legislature of the state of Ohio about the year 1896, and the remaining part of said canal is still maintained as a part of the public works of the state of Ohio. They admit that the said defendants Clark, Crile and Elder are the commissioners of Coshocton county; that the state of Ohio has constructed a dam in the Walhonding [249]*249river in the vicinity of' plaintiff’s lands; that said dam is a part of the public works of the state of Ohio and is maintained to secure a supply of water for the Walhonding canal, which is owned and maintained by the state of Ohio; that said dam has been constructed, used and maintained by the state of Ohio for such purposes for more than twenty-one years last past.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio App. 244, 19 Ohio C.A. 421, 1913 Ohio App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-miller-ohioctapp-1913.