Cubit v. O'Dett

16 N.W. 679, 51 Mich. 347, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 591
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 16 N.W. 679 (Cubit v. O'Dett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cubit v. O'Dett, 16 N.W. 679, 51 Mich. 347, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 591 (Mich. 1883).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

The complaint in this case is that defendants have flooded the plaintiff’s land by means of a ditch which they cut along the highway, and which had the effect, while draining their own land lying to the west of him, to cast upon his land a large amount of water which otherwise would not have flowed in that direction. There are two counts in the declaration, the second only of which requires particular mention. The allegation of damage in that count is, that by the flooding of the land, and the deposit of sand and other substances thereon, it lias been rendered unfit for cultivation and worthless. In defense it was claimed that what was done in cutting the ditch was rightful, because done under the direction of the overseer of highways; and it was at the same time denied that the ditch carried upon the plaintiff’s land any water except such as would naturally have flowed there.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the water did not naturally flow along the route of the ditch from the land of defendants to his own, and that the drain commissioner for that reason had refused to lay out a ditch there when applied to for that purpose. It also tended to show that the permanent injury to the land, if the flow was to continue, was very considerable. The evidence to this effect was objected to by the defendants, upon the ground that the flooding, if a wrong at all, was a continuous wrong from day to day, and might be the subject of repeated actions to which the recovery in this suit would be no bar. Also that the plaintiff has no right to assume that a wrongful flooding will be persisted in, and be permanent.

It probably ought to be presumed that any action found to be an invasion of another’s right will be discontinued. Bare v. Hoffman 79 Penn. St. 71. But there was evidence in this case that permanent injury had been done, which the mere discontinuance of the flooding would not relieve. Moreover, although this was a case of continuous injury [350]*350from day to day, tlie injury was not attributable to successive wrongful acts of defendants: they bad set the waters in motion by digging the ditch, and then, though they abstained from doing anything further, the injury would go on. To assume, therefore, that defendants will not further injure the plaintiff, is to assume that they will proceed to take some positive action to stop the continuous injury. This might be done, perhaps, by a new ditch, which should carry the water away from the plaintiffs land after it had been deposited there; or it might be done by obstructing the existing ditch. A new ditch could not be cut as a mere act of volition on the part of the defendants, for it would need to be cut on the plaintiffs land where they have no right to go except with his consent; and we cannot assume that consent would be given. The existing ditch might be obstructed without going upon the plaintiffs land for the purpose; but as it is not upon the land of the defendants, and they are doing nothing, so far as we know, to keep it open, there may be question whether they are liable from day to day, as a man may be who maintains a nuisance on his own premises. But there is nothing in this case requiring of us an opinion on that question.

The defendants contended that the plaintiff might relieve himself of the continuing nuisance by a small expenditure of money in cutting a new ditch to drain off his land ; and that under these circumstances he was entitled to recover nothing for injury caused by the continuous flooding beyond what the cost of such a remedy would be. This contention appealed to the principle that every man is bound to make the injury he suffers at the hand of another as light as possible, instead of aggravating it, or possibly allowing it to increase. Loker v. Damon 17 Pick. 284; Indianapolis &c. R. R. Co. v. Birney 71 Ill. 391; Seely v. Alden 61 Penn. St. 302; McCredie v. Buxton 31 Mich. 383 ; Kansas Pac. Rw. Co. v. Mihlman 17 Kan. 224. There was some evidence in the case to found this contention upon, and the judge charged the jury that in estimating the damages they should take into account whether the injurious effects of the [351]*351•ditch might not be overcome by the construction of others, and whether such other ditches could be constructed by the plaintiff without injury to a lower proprietor. This was intended as a recognition of the principle contended for, and fairly submitted the matter to the jury.

The circuit judge excluded evidence offered by defendants to show that what they did was done under the direction of the overseer of highways. As we understand it •one of the defendants was himself the overseer; but the fact is not important. Highway authorities have no more right than private persons to cut drains the necessary result of which will be to flood the lands of individuals. This was shown in Ashley v. Port Huron 35 Mich. 296: s. c. 20 Am. Rep. 629, where many authorities are referred to. The highway overseer no doubt has a discretion in deciding how and where he will expend highway labor; but it is a discretion limited by the rights of individuals, and when he invades those rights, he becomes liable. Tearney v. Smith 86 Ill. 391. And when he is liable for a lawless act, all his assistants are liable with him for the consequent injury. Story on Agency §§ 311, 312; Brown v. Howard 14 Johns. 119; Coventry v. Barton 17 Johns. 142: s. c. 8 Am. Dec. 376 ; Fiedler v. Maxwell 2 Hatch. 552; Tracy v. Swartwout 10 Pet. 80; Smith v. Colby 67 Me. 169. This rule sometimes, when the agent has acted in good faith and without knowledge of the want of legal authority, may seem to operate oppressively, but it is a necessary and very just rule notwithstanding, and full protection of the citizen in his legal rights would be impossible without it. Absence of bad faith can never excuse a trespass, though the existence of bad faith may sometimes aggravate it. Every one must be sure of his legal right when he invades the possession of another.

Whether the cutting of the ditch caused a larger extent of territory to be drained upon plaintiff’s land than was drained upon it in its natural state, was made a question of fact before the jury. The plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that a natural barrier to the flow of the water in his direction from the land of the defendants was cut through [352]*352in making tbe ditch; and in view of this, and other evidence having a contrary tendency, the circuit judge instructed the jury as follows :

“ The plaintiff insists that at a point on this quarter-line road there was a natural embankment or rise of land, and that by. cutting through this embankment and connecting with the ditch along the west side of the road with the ditch on the portion of the road east of the claimed elevation, that the result has been to increase the flow of water on plaintiff’s land, which has injured his crops, carried sand into his-ditches and upon his land, and injured the soil by the action of the water standing upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.W. 679, 51 Mich. 347, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cubit-v-odett-mich-1883.