Gross v. City of Lampasas

11 S.W. 1086, 74 Tex. 195, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 919
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1889
DocketNo. 6253
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 11 S.W. 1086 (Gross v. City of Lampasas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. City of Lampasas, 11 S.W. 1086, 74 Tex. 195, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 919 (Tex. 1889).

Opinion

Henry, Associate Justice.

We take the statement of the pleadings of the parties from their briefs.

[198]*198The appellant Gross, who was plaintiff in the court below, sought to recover of the appellee, the city of Lampasas, as defendant, damages for alleged injuries to his homestead premises, caused, first, by the overflow of' surface water into the plaintiff’s lot, caused by the grading and draining done by the city, whereby water was conducted through ditches to the boundary of plaintiff’s premises and precipitated thereon in larger quantities and with more destructive force than before, and no sufficient outlet being provided for its escape the plaintiff’s premises were overflowed and injured thereby; second, by the digging of a broad and deep ditch to the-west and north of the plaintiff’s premises between the sidewalk and the street, which cuts off convenient access to and from the city, endangers the-lives and limbs of his family, and destroys or impairs the comfort, convenience, and the beauty of the premises for the purposes of a home; and third, that the open sewer or ditch complained of is so constructed as to-connect with and receive the water from a covered ditch or sewer above and from other lateral ditches and sewers emptying into that complained of at right angles, that its capacity is wholly inadequate to carry off the water so brought to and upon it, aud the flow of the water is retarded by the unskillful manner of its construction, being walled up with rough stone, and by lateral ditches or drains pouring into it at right angles, and by the want of any sufficient outlet, whereby the plaintiff’s premises, are overflowed and injured.

The appellee (defendant below) pleaded:

1. A general denial.

2. A special plea averring the public character of the streets in which the ditch or drain complained of was excavated, and of other streets in. which other ditches and drains complained of were excavated, and that the excavation of said ditches or drains on the west and north sides of plaintiff’s property, and about which he in this suit complains, was such reasonable, proper, and lawful use as defendant had a right to make of such streets for the purpose of carrying off the water naturally falling,, gathering, and forced upon said streets.

3. A special plea averring that at all times since the digging of said ditch along the west and north sides of plaintiff’s lots plaintiff has had from said defendant full warrant and authority to enter upon and make for himself upon and across said ditch or drain a covering or bridge upon any or all thereof, of all of which he has been fully advised, and averring the unhealthy, offensive, undesirable, and dangerous condition of plaintiff’s premises, and the permanency of such condition just prior to and at the time of digging of said ditch complained of, and alleging its right to-use said streets for the purpose of excavating said ditches and carrying said waters, as elsewhere in defendant’s answer more fully alleged; and denying that plaintiff’s said premises or any part thereof was taken by defendant, or that plaintiff’s premises were damaged, injured, or depreci[199]*199ated in value by the acts complained of against defendant, and alleging that on the contrary the plaintiff’s said premises were by the digging of said ditch complained of peculiarly and specially improved and enhanced in value, and that the health, comfort, and convenience and safety thereof as a home was materially and greatly ameliorated and increased thereby, and that such benefit and improvement was not general or equal as to other private property in the neighborhood of said premises, but was almost entirely confined thereto.

4. A special plea alleging that defendant had by prescription acquired an easement to have the waters that flowed off from the streets, alleys, and public grounds, and from more than a thousand acres of land west of said city, through and over its said streets, flow off through a certain well defined natural channel running through said premises; and further alleging in said special plea the broken and mountainous nature of the surface of the country in and around said city; that said waters gathering into and flowing through said defined channel through plaintiff’s said premises had nor could have no other means or direction of outlet than through said channel, running through plaintiff’s said premises as it had flowed from time immemorial, and that the waters flowing through said channel, before and after reaching the same, were gathered together in such volume and were flowing with such certain directness and force as to have by reason of all of said facts and circumstances the character of a water course, and to require the application of the same rules of law in regard to the obstruction or diversion thereof as to well defined continuously flowing streams of water; and further alleging that by reason of said facts, and of the fact that said premises were by nature so located as naturally to receive and carry off all the waters naturally falling and gathering upon said public streets, alleys, and grounds; that said streets, alleys, and grounds were the superior heritage or estate, and said premises the inferior heritage or estate, and that said inferior heritage owed a natural duty or servitude to said superior estate to receive and carry off the said waters: and that said plaintiff in his own wrong willfully and maliciously, without resultant benefit to himself, permanently obstructed the flowing of said waters through said natural channel, thereby as an immediate and necessary consequence causing a public nuisance, obstructing the said public streets, alleys, and squares of said city, and seriously threatening, endangering, and impairing the health, safety, comfort, and convenience of its citizens and of the general public, and that said defendant then, as it had a lawful right and duty to do, excavated said ditch, as it was necessary to do for the purpose of and as the only means of abating said nuisance and providing an escape for said •waters so obstructed by plaintiff’s own wrongful acts, etc.

The findings of the court upon this question were as follows:

That there was a drain or natural depression in the ground running [200]*200and meandering for the distance of about one mile southwest from plaintiff’s residence in and through the said city and running in a northeasterly direction through plaintiff’s said lots; that said drain or depression had no perceptible banks or ditch or bed until it reached within about one hundred and fifty yards of the south boundary of plaintiff’s said lots, and that for said distance of about one hundred and fifty yards from the plaintiff’s south boundary there was a drain with perceptible banks in many places from one to three feet high and ten or twelve feet wide.
“That said drain and depression from time immemorial had been the •natural channel, drain, or depression which had carried the rain and surface water that fell on a thousand or more acres of land lying west, southwest, and south of plaintiff’s said lots, beginning more than a mile southwestwardly from plaintiff’s lots and running northwestwardly through 'said city and through plaintiff’s lots and into McVay Branch, thence to 'Hanna Branch, and thence into Burleson and Sulphur Creeks.
“ That said drain at times in the vicinity of Third Street and plaintiff’s lots two or three hundred feet north of said street was during very 'heavy rainfalls from three to five feet deep.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W. 1086, 74 Tex. 195, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-city-of-lampasas-tex-1889.