Cresap v. Livingston

193 Iowa 488
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 Iowa 488 (Cresap v. Livingston) 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
Cresap v. Livingston, 193 Iowa 488 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Faville, J.

— White Lake is a body of water situated in Sections 16 and 21, in Township 68, Eange 43, Fremont County.' Appellants own certain lands bordering upon said body of water, as well as other land in that vicinity. Appellee is also the owner of certain lands in the same township, adjacent to lands owned by appellants. The accompanying plat shows the general situation in respect to the matters involved in this case:

The lands marked on the plat by the letter “L” are lands of the appellants, and those marked by the letter “ O ” are lands belonging to the appellee. ■

[490]*490White Lake covers an area of about 80 acres. The basin which drains into White Lake is estimated in the evidence as from 1,000 to 2,000 acres. The lake is shallow, and with well defined banks on the east side. These banks gradually decrease toward the south, and, at the southern extremity of the lake, practically disappear. The evidence tends to establish that, in times of high water, when the lake overflows, the natural course of the flow of the surplus water of the lake is to the south and southeast.

In 1907, the appellee constructed a ditch across certain of her lands lying to the east and south of the lands shown in the plat, and extended said ditch on the half-section line westward to the center of Section 22. This portion of the ditch is shown on the plat as “Cresap Ditcli.” There is a roadway running north and south through the center of Sections 15 and 22, as shown on the plat. In 1901, one Horsley, who then owned a portion of the lands now belonging to the appellants, constructed small ditches, extending from the road last above referred to, in a westerly direction on the section line. These ditches were carried tó within approximately 600 feet of the east bank of White Lake, but did not penetrate said bank. At the west end of the Horsley ditches there were constructed what are known in the record as “spur ditches,” which extended in a southwesterly direction toward the southern extremity of White Lake, and served, at times of high water, to carry a portion of the overflow water from the lake into the Horsley ditches.

Some time shortly before the commencement of this action, the plaintiffs herein widened and deepened the Horsley ditches, and carried the same westward through the bank of White Lake. The dirt taken from the ditches, as so enlarged, was used in the construction of a private roadwajr, running east and west on the said section line. The western extension of this road is indicated on the plat as “new road.” The road was graded across the lake at the place indicated on the plat. In the bed of the lake was placed a 30-inch galvanized iron pipe, and the grade was constructed over this. On the eastern side of the lake, the bank was cut through by "appellants, and a galvanized iron pipe, 30 inches in diameter, was placed on each side of this grade, extending through the bank to the lake.

[491]*491There is some conflict in the evidence in regard to exactly the depth at which these intake pipes are placed through the bank of the lake, but it is conceded by the appellants that the said pipes are at least 10 inches lower than any previous construction connecting with the water of the lake.

After the roadway had been constructed across the lake, and the Horsley ditches deepened and widened, and the intake pipes placed through the east bank of the lake, as described, the so-called “spur ditches,” which had been the means previously provided for carrying the - overflow Water from the southern portion of the lake ihto the Horsley ditches, were filled by the appellants. The appellee sought, and by 'decree of the lower court obtained, an injunction permanently restraining the appellants from maintaining .said intake pipes through the banks of "White Lake, requiring that the same be closed, and decreeing that, if appellants were so advised, they might open the so-called “spur ditches” in connection with the Horsley ditches, and reestablish the same to the same depth as before they were filled. Appellants complain of the decree of the trial court, and insist that they have a right to construct and maintain the improvement as originally built by them, and to cut through the east bank of White Lake, and to place therein the intake pipes at the depth established by them. On the other hand, it is the contention of the appellee that the direct result of the improvement, as made by the appellants, will be to divert the waters of White Lake from their natural course, and to bring the same in great and unusual quantity to the so-called “Cresap ditch,” owned by the appellee, and that this will, in a large measure, impair and destroy the efficiency of said ditch. It is appellee’s contention — and there is evidence to sustain it — that the Cresap ditch was constructed solely for the purpose of carrying the surface water that naturally flowed across the appellee’s land, and that to bring the water of White Lake, in the manner proposed by appellants, to the said ditch of appellee, will overtax said ditch and cause the water so brought to overflow appellee’s land, and that great injury will result therefrom.

It must be conceded that our decisions, starting with Livingston v. McDonald, 21 Iowa 160, 173, on the general subject presented by this case, have not been altogether harmonious, and [492]*492that it is impossible to reconcile them. Our later decisions have been more liberal than the early pronouncements of this court, in permitting the owner of land to drain the same by surface or subterranean drainage, and to carry water upon a servient estate. Tennigkeit v. Ferguson, 192 Iowa 841, is of this character, and is wholly consistent with our holding in this case.

In Lessenger v. City of Harlan, 184 Iowa 172, we said:

“The owner of the upper estate may construct ditches and underground drains, to hasten the flow of surface water into and along the natural depressions or drainways on his own land, so long as he does not divert the water from its natural course. Bickel v. Martin, 115 Ill. App. 367; Vannest v. Fleming, 79 Iowa 638; Dorr v.. Simmerson, 127 Iowa 551; Hull v. Harker, 130 Iowa 190; Meixell v. Morgan, 149 Pa. 415 (24 Atl. 216).”

In Conklin v. City of Des Moines, 184 Iowa 384, we also said:

“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 drainage, 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).”

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193 Iowa 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cresap-v-livingston-iowa-1921.