Farrar v. Shuss

282 S.W. 512, 221 Mo. App. 472, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 127
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 512 (Farrar v. Shuss) 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
Farrar v. Shuss, 282 S.W. 512, 221 Mo. App. 472, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 127 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an appeal from the action of the court in sustaining a demurrer to plaintiffs ’ petition. The first count of the petition alleges that plaintiffs, in June-, 1923, were the owners and were in the possession of certain land in Grundy county devoted to farming and stock raising; that defendants—

*474 . . wholly disregarding" plaintiffs’ rights, and injury and damage they might and indeed have and will continue to suffer, until the reservoir or pool nuisance hereinafter complained of, is abated; about the - day of June, A. D. 1923, erected, or caused to be erected, placed, made, created and erected upon” adjoining land owned by and in possession of them — •
“A large reservoir or pool consisting of at least fifty acres, in which great amount of surface water was, and was by defendants intended and designed, collected; that said reservoir or pool was not, as was well known to the defendants, so constructed, had or maintained as to retain the water which was reasonably and necessarily anticipated and well known, would be collected therein.
“That said reservoir or pool, as well known to defendants, had no sufficient embankments or other protection to retain therein the water so collected and coming into the same, but by reason of the unlawful, willful and malicious acts of the defendants in so collecting said water into said reservoir or pool and failure to provide for the keeping and retaining thereof therein, said water coming and being collected in said reservoir or pool from time to time, and upon many and divers occasions, in fact continuously since the so constructing of said reservoir or pool, has in large quantities escaped therefrom and was discharged onto, upon and over” the said lands of plaintiffs, “rendering said land worthless for use of any kind during the years 1923 and 1924, it being of great value prior thereto, and in addition causing same to become marshy, sour and wet, infested with flies, mosquitoes, injuring and damaging plaintiffs’ roads and fences thereon, to plaintiffs ’ actual damage at this time in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars ($1500).
“That said acts of the defendants have been and are in total disregard of the rights of the plaintiffs,, and were and are willful, wrongful and malicious, and hence, plaintiffs should have and defendants should pay exemplary damages in the sum of at least fifteen hundred dollars ($1500).
“Plaintiffs further say that the acts and doings of the defendants as aforesaid, greatly impair the use and enjoyment of the plaintiffs, of their premises, aforesaid, and all their said premises, and to continue to maintain said reservoir or pool, aforesaid, with its resultant damage to plaintiff, would be a continued trespass and nuisance, an unlawful invasion and infringement of the use or enjoyment of the plaintiffs of their premises and to their irreparable injury and damage, and plaintiffs say they have no adequate remedy at law, and to avoid, a multiplicity of suits, plaintiffs noiv pray judgment not only for said sum of fifteen hundred dollars ($1500) actual damages, and fifteen hundred dollars ($1500) exemplary damages as well, but that an injunction issue from this Honorable Court com *475 manding and compelling the abatement of said reservoir or pool, and nuisance, as aforesaid, and the further so collection of water in said reservoir or pool, and permitting same to escape therefrom onto, upon and over said lands of plaintiffs, and the defendants, their agents, servants and employees be perpetually enjoined from so maintaining said reservoir or pool, the so collecting of water therein, permitting the same to escape and go over and upon the lands of the plaintiffs, and for such further relief, judgment and decrees as this Honorable Court may deem meet and proper, and for costs.”

The second count of the petition alleges the same facts as contained in count one except in addition to alleging that large quantities of water escaped from the reservoir or pool and were discharged onto, upon and over plaintiffs’ lands, it alleges that- such waters were “bached upon,” discharged onto, upon and over the lands of plaintiffs. The second count also contains the .following allegations not found in the first:

‘ ‘ That for twenty years and longer prior to the-day of June, 1923, a ditch and drain from defendants’ said land through plaintiffs’ said land had been constructed, had and maintained, carrying off such waters that come upon and flowed thereon. ■ That in the constructing and making of said reservoir or pool, defendants wrongfully, maliciously and without lawful right, stopped and dammed up said ditch and drain diverting the waters therefrom and so collecting said waters in said reservoir or pool and this too well knowing said reservoir or pool, was not constructed with and had no sufficient- em.bankments or other protection to retain therein, the waters so collected and coming into same.
“That in the construction of said reservoir or pool, defendants wrongfully and maliciously and without lawful right stopped up said ditch and drain, thereby diverting said water from said drain or ditch and so collecting said water in said reservoir or pool,- causing same to overflow plaintiff’s said lands.”

It will be seen that the allegations of the petition ar.e most general in character. Fairly analyzed, the first count states.that defendants had made or erected and maintained a large reservoir or. pool in which a great amount of surface water was collected; that the pool did not. retain the water that was collected therein by reason of insufficient embankments, if any. There is no allegation that the embankments were in any way defective and that the water escaped for this-reason. It is not stated whether the land of plaintiffs was below that of defendants or above, whether they constituted the servient or dominant estate. It is not stated that more surface water flowed from the point where the pool was erected than had flowed there before. Although it alleges that surface water in large quantities was discharged upon plaintiffs’-land it does not state that it was discharged in a *476 body or that the flow was increased by reason of the presence of the pool or embankment or that plaintiffs' land received any more surface water than it did before. There is no allegation that the waters were diverted from their natural course.

It is quite evident that it was intended to allege that the waters discharged upon plaintiffs’ land were surface waters. It appears that water ran in the pool and thereupon ran out for lack of sufficient banks to hold it. As to surface water, the law is that such water is a common enemy which every proprietor may fight as he deems best, regardless of the effect upon other proprietors, except that one may not collect a quantity of water upon his premises by artificial means and discharge it in a flood upon his neighbor’s land. [Reedy v. Brewing Association and City of St. Louis, 161 Mr. 523, 534, 535.]

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 512, 221 Mo. App. 472, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrar-v-shuss-moctapp-1926.