Dunham v. Joyce

31 S.W. 337, 129 Mo. 5, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 337 (Dunham v. Joyce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunham v. Joyce, 31 S.W. 337, 129 Mo. 5, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 117 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

Plaintiff began this action in the circuit court of Harrison county, claiming damages of defendant for obstructing and damming up the head of a drain ditch on defendant’s own land, in which plaintiff claimed an easement. The petition charged, in .substance, that, in the year 1878, one Thomas B. Allen and William Allen (the then owners of the land now owned by plaintiff and defendant), together with ■others owning land in the neighborhood, for the purpose of reclaiming and draining the wet and marshy-parts of their lands, in consideration of the mutual benefits to be derived therefrom, made and entered into a contract between themselves for the digging, constructing and perpetual maintenance of a ditch or drain suitable for that purpose, and that, under said contract and agreement, the parties thereto, at great labor and cost, dug an open ditch in said section on and across the land now owned by defendant, in such a manner and of such capacity as to drain and furnish an outlet for all the surface water that might from time to time collect on the lands along the line of the ditch as well as the land of Thomas B. Allen, now owned by plaintiff, thereby making same suitable for farming purposes; that the ditch has since been kept, maintained and repaired by plaintiff and his grantor with the knowledge and consent of defendant and his grantors; that plaintiff, with knowledge of the original contract and all that had been done thereunder, and believing that the ditch would in the future remain and be maintained where it was first located in the year 1878, purchased and became the owner of forty acres immediately west of, and adjoining, the forty acres on which the ditch in controversy was dug, and now owns the same; that defendant purchased the forty acres east, on which the ditch obstructed is located, in the year 1883, [10]*10with, full information and knowledge of the location of the ditch thereon, the contract under which it was located and worked, and the objects and purposes of its construction, and that plaintiff’s grantors claimed the right to use the ditch and go upon his land to repair and maintain same; that, after plaintiff had become the owner of the west forty acres, he had, with the knowledge, consent and encouragement of defendant expended large sums of money and labor in repairing said ditch for the purpose of properly draining the land belonging to both plaintiff and defendant; that by reason of the formation and declivity of said lands the surface water can not be discharged from said lands in any' way other than across the land of defendant, through and by means of the ditch made thereon as aforesaid; and that defendant, on the first day of March, 1891, unlawfully and maliciously destroyed said drain and built a dam over and across said ditch at the head thereof, near to and adjoining the lands of plaintiff, and thereby has prevented the surface water that gathers on his forty acres, from escaping, and causing same to gather in large quantities and ruin his crops, to his damage in the sum of $600.

The case was tried by a jury under instructions from the court resulting in a verdict for plaintiff, on which, in due time, a judgment was rendered.

Defendant, at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was by the court refused, and after offering testimony in his own behalf, and at the close thereof, again renewed his demand for a peremptory instruction directing the jury to return a verdict for defendant, which was by the court denied, and to which action of the court in refusing said instruction defendant again duly excepted. The court then gave [11]*11numerous instructions for both, plaintiff and defendant.

The correctness or incorrectness of the legal propositions therein contained we will not in detail discuss, as we deem it unnecessary to the disposition of this case. It is not the province of the court to give instructions based on the allegations of the petition when no legal proof has been offered to sustain them, or where there is a complete lack of proof of one of the controlling substantial averments thereof. Under these conditions, the jury have no judgment to exercise. The court by mandatory instructions directs their finding. Where there is any substantial evidence, . and whether direct or inferential, the jury have the determination of the case, it is true; but the court must first determine there is some evidence, if true, to support a finding for' plaintiff, or there is no submission to the jury.

It was necessary to show that an easement had been created, either by direct deed of grant in favor of plaintiff, or his grantor, or some servitude imposed by grant on the land of defendant and in favor of plaintiff (and that can be done only by the production of an existing deed), or that plaintiff or his grantors had obtained a prescriptive right to the use of the ditch by long enjoyment of the easement claimed, under circumstances which raise an implication of title originally acquired by grant. Yet, from an examination of the abstract of testimony furnished in this case, the proof shows that no agreement for a right of use of the ditch or drain across the land of the defendant was ever made.

The witness William H. Allen, who owned the land at the time the ditch was made, testifying for plaintiff, :says only this, in support of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition as to “the great expenditures of money and labor by plaintiff’s grantors in the construe[12]*12tion of the drain ditch under contract with defendant’s grantor,” then owning the forty on which the ditch was located, to wit: ‘‘My father did some work on the ditch'. He sold his forty to plaintiff.” Nothing said about how much work, or under what arrangement it was done. Nothing to indicate whether the work done on defendant’s land by plaintiff’s grantor in constructing the ditch, was performed for hire or as a gratuity, or for an interest in the ditch, or whether the work was done under a mere parol agreement for a right to flow water through the ditch that might gather on plaintiff’s lands, or whether under a written agreement for the ditch itself.

If the contract declared on in plaintiff’s petition (which fails to /state whether parol or written) was ascertained at the trial to be a parol agreement authorizing plaintiff’s grantors to enter upon defendant’s premises for the purpose of constructing and maintaining a ditch to flow water from plaintiff’s land through defendant’s premises to a neighboring stream, then it would have been the duty of the court to have taken the case from the jury, although the contract, and the work and labor expended by plaintiff under same have been undisputed. In such a case nothing more than a mere license has been shown and it was revocable, and was revoked by the denial to plaintiff of its further employment, by. the act of defendant in placing the dam or obstruction at its head, and the court should have directed a finding against plaintiff on that showing.

And ‘if a written agreement had been produced, showing the respective rights of the parties, the court would have still been required to give construction to the instrument, and if no valid grant of the ditch or a water course to plaintiff was manifest upon its face, but a mere written permission or license given to use same, to declare such to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 337, 129 Mo. 5, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunham-v-joyce-mo-1895.