Howell v. Big Horn Basin Colonization Co.

81 P. 785, 14 Wyo. 14, 1905 Wyo. LEXIS 27
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 81 P. 785 (Howell v. Big Horn Basin Colonization Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howell v. Big Horn Basin Colonization Co., 81 P. 785, 14 Wyo. 14, 1905 Wyo. LEXIS 27 (Wyo. 1905).

Opinion

Potter, Chief Justice.

This is a proceeding in error for the review of a judgment rendered by the District Court sitting in Big Horn. County in an action brought by Joseph M. Howell against the Big Horn Basin Colonization Company, a corporation, to recover damages for alleged injuries to a tract of land owned by the plaintiff caused by overflow, leakage and seepage of water from an irrigating ditch and reservoir constructed and maintained by the defendant. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and upon the findings of fact and conclusions of law, separately stated in writing, judgment was awarded the defendant for costs.

There are two causes of action set out in the petition; the first alleging injury to plaintiff’s land from waters that leaked and seeped from a reservoir constructed, operated and maintained by defendant; and the second alleging the negligent construction and maintenance of the defendant’s ditch and reservoir, whereby large quantities of water leaked and seeped therefrom, and overflowed the same at certain spills or waste gates, and came out upon and flooded the land of plaintiff, causing a large part thereof to be covered with water, destroying growing crops thereon, and rendering the land useless and unfit for agricultural or other purposes.

The allegations as to negligence, the escape of water from defendant’s irrigating works, and the injuries to plaintiff’s land, are denied by the answer; and in a second defense it [24]*24is alleged that plaintiff refused an offer of defendant to construct drainage ditches through and around his land to carry off any escaping water from defendant’s irrigating works, and authorized and directed defendant to permit such escaping water to run into and upon the land of plaintiff, which license, it is ayerred, had not been revoked or withdrawn otherwise than by bringing this action.

The court found that on different occasions .since the construction and operation of defendant’s ditch system large quantities of water escaped therefrom at certain spills or waste gates, constructed as hereinafter explained, covering and flooding about sixty acres of plaintiff’s land, and washing sand and dirt upon two to three acres thereof, and causing alkali to rise to the surface of a portion of such land; and that said sixty acres had become wet or boggy, and incapable of cultivation while in that condition; and, further, that, by reason of the construction and maintenance of the ditch, water has seeped and percolated through the soil, rising and coming to the surface on about twenty-one acres of the land, not causing a permanent injury, but damaging the plaintiff by reason of such seepage in the sum of $105.

The court also found that none of plaintiff’s land had been permanently injured, but could be drained and rendered fit for agricultural purposes; that the land was of little value; that defendant had notice that the water flowed through the spills aforesaid; that plaintiff had given his consent to defendant to permit the water escaping from the ditch, the waste gates or spills, and the ditch system to run over and upon his land, and had not revoked such consent at the time the action was commenced; that there had been no leakage or seepage through the banks of the ditch or alleged reservoir; and that defendant had not been guilty of malice or negligence.

As conclusions of law the court found that the alleged reservoir did not constitute a reservoir- within the meaning of Section 974, Revised Statutes of 1899; that the consent of plaintiff aforesaid amounted to a complete defense to the [25]*25action; and that defendant was not liable for the injury caused by seepage through the soil, but not escaping through the banks, the same not being the result of negligence on the part of defendant.

It appears from the_ evidence that plaintiff is the owner of 160 acres of land situated on the northerly side and in the immediate vicinity of Shoshone River, from which stream the defendant in the year 1900 constructed an irrigating ditch or canal, taking the ditch out at a point on such stream somewhere to the west or southwest of plaintiff’s land, and running the same in a' general northeasterly direction.

The ditch does not cross plaintiff’s land, but passes the same within a comparatively short distance from its west and north boundaries. As the ditch approaches a point about 2,500 feet west of plaintiff’s land, it intersects the southern bank of what was theretofore a dry gulch, across which, and evidently near its eastern or southeastern extremity, the defendant constructed a dam or embankment about twenty feet in height, into which gulch, above the dam and on the side opposite plaintiff’s land, the water carried in the ditch flows, thereby forming a lake or reservoir. The water therein backs up the gulch approximately 2,000 feet,' and is probably twelve or fifteen feet deep at the dam. The length of the dam is about 360 feet. The ditch is continued from the other or northerly side of the gulch, whence it proceeds more sharply to the east for some distance, and then about due northeast passing north of and away from the land of plaintiff. At one point this outlet ditch approaches within 300 feet of one corner of the land.

The line of the ditch is along slightly higher ground than plaintiff’s premises, and the slope is generally in the direction of those premises. Below the dam there is a natural depression in the ground called a dry-wash which originally constituted a continuation of the gulch, forming with it a natural drainage for the country above. That dry-wash [26]*26continues upon plaintiff’s land, terminating thereon in a natural slough, which runs northeasterly through the southeastern portion of the land.

For the purpose of allowing the escape of waste water, and to protect the dam aforesaid ag'ainst floods and freshets, the defendant built in the ditch at or near either end of the dam waste-ways or spills. The water overflowing or flowing through such spills, particularly the spill in the ditch on the northerly side of the gulch, ran into the dry-wash aforesaid and upon the land of plaintiff in such quantities at times that it flooded sixty-three acres thereof, rendering the same swampy, and, in one or more places, the water remained on the land, forming a pond.

It appears that the dam was constructed with soil scraped from the gulch above, but subsequently that was supplemented with brush and timber, backed up with dirt. The dam was originally about one hundred feet wide at its base, which was later increased forty or fifty feet. The evidence discloses that the exposed soil in the gulch was composed of sand and gravel; but there is no evidence as to the depth of such soil or the character of the bottom of the gulch as it was finally prepared to receive the water.

The dam is apparently on a line with the lower bank of the canal on either side of the gulch, or connects therewith, so that the water is conveyed into the gulch and taken out immediately above the dam. It is evident, however, that the bottom of the gulch in the vicinity of the dam is several feet below the bottom of the ditch on either side, and hence a large body of water has been accumulated and retained therein.

It is clear from the evidence that the greater quantity of the water that flowed upon plaintiff’s land and flooded it came over or through the spills, and principally, if not altogether, from the spill on the northerly side of the gulch.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P. 785, 14 Wyo. 14, 1905 Wyo. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-big-horn-basin-colonization-co-wyo-1905.