D'Arcourt v. Little River Drainage District

245 S.W. 394, 212 Mo. App. 610, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 91
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 394 (D'Arcourt v. Little River Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Arcourt v. Little River Drainage District, 245 S.W. 394, 212 Mo. App. 610, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 91 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*617 DAUES, J.

This is an action for damages for alleged destruction of crops by water escaping from breaks in a levee constructed by the defendant. The pause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs in the sum of $618. Defendant appeals.

The petition alleges the incorporation of the drainage district in 1917 under the ‘ ‘ Circuit Court Drainage Act” by authority of article 3, chapter 122, Revised Statutes 1899, and amendments thereto; that defendant as such constructed certain levees and ditches under such authority; that it was the special function of a certain levee, known as the North Levee,” located in Cape Girardeau county, to prevent flood waters from escaping to the lowlands to the north of said levee, including the lands of the plaintiffs. The petition charges that defendant negligently built said north levee with logs, stumps and other improner materials imbedded therein, that large cracks and slides were negligently permited to form and remain in said levee; and that defendant negligently failed to take steps to cover said levee with growing grass for the protection of same; that while in such condition, and while the levee was still green and unseasoned, defendant put said drainage system into use; that on May 12, 1918, the levee broke under pressure of the flood waters, thereby discharging a large portion of the water over a large area of territory and damaging plaintiffs’ crops to the extent of $618.

After unsuccessfully challenging the sufficiency of the petition by demurrer, defendant filed an answer which, after admitting its incorporation as a drainage district, is, first, a general denial; second, alleges that the defendant is a public corporation of this State, a political subdivision thereof created as an agency of the government of the State, and as such is not liable for damages as laid in the petition; and, third, pleads that *618 the issue of the defective construction of the north levee is res adjudicata, in that this issue was adjudicated by the circuit court of Butler county on the hearing of the exceptions to the commissioners’ report in the original proceedings assessing the benefits and damages when the drainage district was established. In the same count it is pleaded that plaintiffs had executed a receipt and release reciting payment of $1125 to them by the defendant in accordance with the judgment of said circuit court confirming the commissioners’ report as compensation and damages for the taking of certain of plaintiffs ’ land, and “for any resulting damage, if any, to the balance of our tract of land by reason of the construction and maintenance of the works and improvements of said drainage district. ’ ’

The reply, in effect, is a general denial.

The court on motion struck out the second and third count of defendant’s answer, and refused to permit the defendant to either plead or prove the facts showing res adjudicata.

The defendant is an extensive drainage district in Southeast Missouri embracing lands in Bolinger, Cape Girardeau, Scott, Stoddard, New Madrid, Pemiscot and Dunklin counties. At the time of its incorporation, we are advised, it comprised approximately 500,000 acres of land. After its organization, the district as required by law organized a Board of Supervisors. With the aid of engineers, the board formulated and adopted a drainage plan and carried same into execution. Commissioners were duly appointed to assess benefits and damages that would accrue and result by reason of the putting of that project into operation. After hearing and disposing of all the exceptions filed to the commissioners’ report, a final judgment was entered by the circuit court of Butler county on such issues. No appeal was taken by any land owner from said final judgment. Thereupon it appears that the drainage district issued its bonds and levied a tax to pay the principal and interest of the bonds as same accrued. With the proceeds from *619 the sale of the bonds the construction of this gigantic drainage work was undertaken.

This drainage plan provided for what is known, as a “Headwater Diversion System.” Same provides for the diversion of Castor River, Crooked Creek, White Water River, Hubble Creek and other smaller streams rising in the hills and which formerly discharged into the swamps within the boundaries of the district. By this, project the waters from these streams are combined and conducted into the Mississippi River.

The “North Levee,” about which the controversy arises, begins near the village of Dutchtown, in Cape Girardeau county, and runs in a southerly direction a distance of about a mile, then east and parallel with the diversion channel and levee of the Headwater Diversion System. The north levee and the headwater diversion channel are about 1000 feet apart and make up what is known as the floodway. The diversion channel propel is constructed to carry the water into the Mississippi River during ordinary stages of the stream flowing from the hills, but during extraordinary storms of rainfall the channel is insufficient to carry the floodwaters and a portion of same overflows and spreads out into the detention basins constructed for that purpose. So much for a general outline of the district and its purposes.

During an extraordinary rainfall in May, 1918, the water overflowed the floodway. The north levee just south of Dutchtown broke in several places, and the water escaped through these breaks and overflowed plaintiffs’ land and destroyed their crops. This action is to recover damages so sustained.

The actual construction of the levee and ditches was done by independent contractors, and while no such point is made here, it appears' that the levee and ditches, though completed, had not been accepted and received by the defendant district from the contractors at the time that the breaks occurred, nor at the time that the case was tried. Nevertheless, the work had progressed in May, 1918, to such extent that the water of White *620 Water. River was turned into the diversion channel b> the defendant.

There was evidence on the part of plaintiffs tending to show that the north levee had numerous cracks and some slides in it; that a chunk of wood four to six inches in diameter projected out of the levee where one of the breaks occurred; also evidence that a stump was found in the levee, though it does not appear that the levee broke at the point where witness Albert Schroeder testified he saw the stump in the levee; and that a steel cable less than two inches in diameter was left in the levee on the land side of same, that is, not the side ag’ainst which the water in the ditch flows.

It appears that the specified base of the north levet was sixty feet wide and about fifteen feet high, with a crown eight feet wide, and that the levee was actually constructed to an oversize in order to allow for shrinkage. Engineers produced by plaintiffs testified that levees With such cracksi and ¡foreign materials contained, in same are condemnable and apt to break.

Defendant’s expert witness testified that the chunk and cable complained of would not have the effect of weakening the levee sufficiently .to cause same to break in a flood such, as occurred in May, 1918.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 394, 212 Mo. App. 610, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darcourt-v-little-river-drainage-district-moctapp-1922.