Drainage District No. 7 v. Haverstick

53 S.W.2d 589, 186 Ark. 374, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 24, 1932
Docket4-2700
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 589 (Drainage District No. 7 v. Haverstick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drainage District No. 7 v. Haverstick, 53 S.W.2d 589, 186 Ark. 374, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 324 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

Butler, J.

This is an action for damages to lands of the appellee occasioned by the construction of Drainage District No. 7 in Poinsett County. There was a verdict and judgment for the appellee in the trial court, from which judgment is this appeal.

Drainage District No. 7 was created for the purpose of reclaiming a large territory of swamp lands. The general description of the district may be fonnd in the cases of Sharp v. Drainage District No. 7, 164 Ark. 306, 261 S. W. 923; Keith v. Drainage District No. 7, 181 Ark. 30, 24 S. W. (2d) 875, and Hogge v. Drainage Dist. No. 7, 181 Ark. 564, 26 S. W. (2d) 887. In the course of the construction of the district, a floodway was dug and leveed leading from the drainage district to a point on the St. Francis River practically opposite the lands of the appellee in Crittenden County. The St. Francis River and Little River were closed by dams and levees so constructed that with these dams a large territory was inclosed, and the waters which were accustomed to drain down the St. Francis and Little Rivers were diverted from a natural flow, and, with a great amount of other waters from an area above draining into the rivers, were impounded and in times of high water flowed through the floodway with such violence and in such volume as to overflow the banks of the St. Francis River, flooding the lands of the appellee and destroying its value for agricultural purposes. From the point where the St. Francis River was dammed on the southern boundary of the district to the appellee’s land, following the meanderings of the stream, is an estimated distance of forty miles, while the floodway which leaves the district at a short point west of the dam is approximately nine or ten miles in length. The flow of the water is therefore greatly accelerated, resulting in a volume of water on appellee’s land in a given space of time much greater than that it received before the construction of the improvement, with the result that the lands were overflowed and their agricultural value destroyed.

Among the assignments of error is that the court erred in refusing to grant instructions Nos. 4 and 5 asked 'by the appellant. These instructions are as follows:

“No. 4. If you find from the evidence that the flow of water is accelerated through the floodway and the heigflt of the waters increased thereby at or near the lands of the plaintiff, but further find that said floodway, although it takes flood waters from the St. Francis River, puts the same back into the river at a lower point, then said drainage district is not liable for damage due to the floodway.”

“No. 5. If you find from the evidence that the flow of water is accelerated through the fl’oodway and the height of the waters increased thereby at or near the lands of plaintiff, but further find that said floodway, levees and dam or any one of them, if they divert water from the St. Francis River, put same back into the same river at a lower point and before it reached the land of plaintiff, then your verdict should be for the defendant.”

In support of the correctness of these requested instructions, appellant relies upon the case of Board of Drainage Commrs. v. Board, 130 Miss. 764, 95 So. 75, 28 A. L. R. 1250.

The case of Baird v. Drainage Dist. No. 7, 181 Ark. 1145, 26 S. W. (2d) 892, was a case almost identical with the instant case and involved the question of injury to the fractional northwest quarter of section 5-35-6. This land adjoins the lands of appellee, and the damage to it arose from the same causes as the damage to appellee’s lands. The facts in that case are not set out in the opinion nor a review of the cases upon which the drainage district relied, but its chief reliance was the principle announced in the Mississippi case, supra, from which extensive quotations were made. The court in that case adopted the view expressed in the case of Mizelle v. McGowan, 129 N. C. 93, 39 S. E. 729, 85 Am. St. Rep. 705, which announced the rule that the right to drain into a natural water course is not limited to the natural capacity of the stream. It was admitted, however, that the rule of the North Carolina court was against the weight of authority, and that the majority of the courts and the text-writers held that the right of the upper owner to drain into the water course is qualified to the extent that the flow must not he increased beyond the capacity of the stream. We think it unnecessary to announce our adherence to either of the conflicting rules, because, as we see it, neither is applicable to the facts of this record. The Mississippi case was a case where, as is said in the opinion, “the water is discharged at different points and in separate quantities, not by one person nor any one body, but by many landowners acting separately and independently in the exercise of their right to drain into the natural water course of the water-shed,” and in that state of case the court said: “It is true the appellees are entitled to the benefit of the rule that water should flow as it is wont to flow, but we think with this exception or qualification that it may be increased by a riparian owner who, in the reasonable exercise of his right of drainage, discharges into the stream in excess of its capacity.”

In the case at bar the drainage district concentrated the surface waters of a large territory and diverted them by dams and levees from their natural flow and through an artificial channel accelerated the flow of the surface waters of the Little and St. Francis rivers, discharging it in one body into the river further down at a point practically opposite the lands of the appellee. This, therefore, is not a case, as was the Mississippi case, where upper owners drain surface waters into the water course, but where such water courses were diverted and the waters draining into them not allowed to follow the natural flow of the streams.

The instructions refused were in effect peremptory instructions, as there is no dispute but that the waters diverted by the levees and dam into the floodway finally reached again the stream of the St. Francis River át a lower point. These instructions also ignore the diversion of the waters from their natural flow, which fact is undisputed and is the basis of the cause of action.

Complaint is also made of the court’s refusal to give instruction No. 9, as follows: “If you find tliat the defendant drainage district has not diverted the course of any stream hut has simply so drawn its levee lines and constructed its ditches as to protect as much land within the district as possible and that the damage, if any, to plaintiff results solely from the placing of levee lines and ditches in such way as to protect the lands of the district, then for such damage the plaintiff: cannot recover.”

It is insisted that whether there was an impounding and diversion is a matter of argument, since the engineer witnesses for the appellant maintained “that the structures constituted a placing of levee lines and ditches in a manner best adapted to the protection of the lands of the drainage district as a whole.” But, regardless of the opinion of these witnesses, the undisputed fact remains that the St. Francis and Little rivers were dammed and their waters diverted from a natural flow into the floodway, and thus precipitated in increased volume upon the lands of the appellee.

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Flanagan v. Burden Construction Corp.
377 S.W.2d 870 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1964)
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Archer v. City of Los Angeles
119 P.2d 1 (California Supreme Court, 1941)
In re Drainage Dist. No. 7
25 F. Supp. 372 (E.D. Arkansas, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 589, 186 Ark. 374, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drainage-district-no-7-v-haverstick-ark-1932.