Franks v. Rouse

1943 OK 205, 137 P.2d 899, 192 Okla. 520, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 222
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 25, 1943
DocketNo. 30557.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1943 OK 205 (Franks v. Rouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franks v. Rouse, 1943 OK 205, 137 P.2d 899, 192 Okla. 520, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 222 (Okla. 1943).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and decree enjoining plaintiffs in error, defendants below, from constructing and maintaining a ditch or levee along the division line between tracts of land owned by the respective parties and denying plaintiffs in error injunctive relief against the defendants in error, plaintiffs below. For convenience, the parties will be referred to as in the trial court.

Plaintiffs Rushie L. Rouse and R. M. Rouse are the owners of all the southwest quarter of section 2, township 2 north, range 1 east, except 20 acres and a small tract west of the Santa Fe Railroad right of way. Plaintiff W. O. Gregory was their tenant and farmed a part of their land involved in this action.

Defendants are the owners of the north half of the northwest quarter and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 11, directly south of and adjoining plaintiffs’ land. All of the lands are in cultivation and lie in the Washita river bottom in the vicinity of Wynnewood. In the quarter section directly north of the plaintiffs’ land there is an abandoned channel or slough of the Washita river. It cuts into plaintiffs’ land about the center of the north line. Flowing into this slough from the northeast about three-eighths of a mile north of plaintiffs’ land there is a stream referred to in the testimony and findings of the trial court as “Nigger Sandy Creek.”

In 1936 or 1937 defendants cut a ditch along and parallel with the north line of their lands commencing about 600 feet west of the north and south center line, running east about 1,800 feet, where it was connected with a drainage ditch which had been constructed in 1932. The latter runs from the northeast to the southwest and cuts across plaintiffs’ land near the southeast corner. At the same time defendants constructed the ditch above referred to, they constructed an embankment or levee along the south side of said ditch and on their land about 4% or 5 feet high. In April, 1938, during an overflow from the slough, this embankment was washed away. Defendants reconstructed the ditch and embankment, but in so doing they filled up or closed the ditch at the entrance of the old drainage ditch. In May of the same year, in another overflow, the embankment was again washed away. Plaintiffs had filed their petition for an injunction and obtained a restraining order in April, 1938, restraining defendants from reconstructing the ditch or levee. But it appears that the ditch and levee had been reconstructed before the restraining order was served. After the levee was washed away the second time, plaintiffs filed their amended petition for an injunction enjoining defendants from again reconstructing the levee or embankment and praying for a judgment for damages to their crops.

In their amended petition plaintiffs alleged that the embankment complained of was across what is commonly referred to as a swale extending across the lands of plaintiffs and defendants from the north to the south, and that the lands of plaintiffs and defendants are some 18 inches higher on the east and west of said swale, and “that the surface waters which accumulated upon the lands of plaintiffs as well as the overflow waters from the old bed of the Washita river have for many years had a natural flow or drainage from this swale over and across the lands of plaintiffs and defendants, and that said swale is and has been for many years a well-defined course for said water." They alleged in substance that the re- *522 suit of the construction and maintenance of said ditch and embankment would be to prevent the waters accumulating on plaintiffs’ land and the overflow waters from the Washita river bed from flowing in their natural course and drainage and to impound the same upon the lands of plaintiffs, to their irreparable injury, and would cause plaintiffs’ land to be inundated by every rain in that locality, and that it would be impossible to drain plaintiffs’ lands and they would become unfit for cultivation or occupation for agricultural purposes.

Defendants filed their answer admitting the ownership and location of the lands as alleged in the amended petition, and further alleged:

“. . . . that just north of and adjoining to the plaintiffs’ lands, there is located what is commonly referred to as a slough, the same being a part of the old bed of the Washita river, and that in times of excessive fllood waters in said Washita river, back waters and flood waters from said Washita river flow into said slough, and at times overflow the south bank thereof, escaping upon the lands of the plaintiffs, and flowing southward and southeastward across plaintiffs’ lands, and upon the defendants’ lands, but deny that there has been established a well-defined channel or watercourse across the lands described herein, by reason of the overflow waters from said slough.”

Defendants further admitted the construction and reconstruction of the ditch and levee substantially as alleged in plaintiffs’ petition, and further alleged:

“ . . . that these defendants dug said ditch, and constructed said embankment for the purpose of diverting flow of the surface water produced by heavy rains from overflowing from plaintiffs’ lands upon and across the lands of these defendants, and their growing crops thereon, as will be more clearly and specifically alleged hereafter, but these defendants deny that they dug said ditch and constructed said embankment or dike wrongfully, unlawfully, or without right, but that on the contrary, they acted within their legal rights in endeavoring to divert the flow of said surface water coming from and across plaintiffs’ lands, into a large drainage ditch on the east edge of the premises of the plaintiff, and the defendant.”

As a further defense, defendants pleaded that plaintiffs could, with reasonable expense, construct an embankment or levee along the south side of the old river channel or slough and thus prevent the overflow therefrom and prevent the flood waters from flowing across the lands of plaintiffs and defendants.

By cross-petition defendants seek damages from plaintiffs and allege in substance that the water which accumulated and flowed across plaintiffs’ land was surface water and that the natural slope of plaintiffs’ land from the' old channel of the Washita river was to the southeast instead of to the south, and that the waters would naturally flow to the southeast and into a drainage ditch constructed about 1932 which runs from the northeast to the southwest across the southeast corner of plaintiffs’ land, except for the negligence and unskillful manner in which plaintiffs had constructed such ditch where it runs across their land in placing the earth excavated from the ditch on the west side of the ditch on plaintiffs’ land so as to prevent the water from flowing into said ditch from the north and west and thus forcing it in increased volume into defendants’ land lying to the south; that thereby plaintiffs rendered the drainage ditch constructed in 1932 across defendants’ land, at a cost to them of $500, useless, and in addition caused damage to defendants’ crops in the sum of $500, for which, with other items of alleged damages, defendants prayed judgment.

Defendants also sought injunction against plaintiffs enjoining them from maintaining the embankment on the west side of the ditch constructed in 1932, and prayed that they be permitted to reconstruct the ditch and embankment of which plaintiffs complained.

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Related

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1966 OK 143 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
1943 OK 205, 137 P.2d 899, 192 Okla. 520, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franks-v-rouse-okla-1943.