Johnson v. Independent School Districe No. I

199 S.W.2d 421, 239 Mo. App. 749, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 338
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 11, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 199 S.W.2d 421 (Johnson v. Independent School Districe No. I) 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
Johnson v. Independent School Districe No. I, 199 S.W.2d 421, 239 Mo. App. 749, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 338 (Mo. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

FULBRIG-HT, P. J.

This is a suit in equity wherein, in the course of our opinion appellant, Walter T. Johnson, an individual, will be referred to as plaintiff and the Independent School District No. I, of Buffalo, Missouri, Restpondent, will be reverred to as defendant.

Plaintiff seeks to enjoin defendant from allowing its septic tank,-used in connection with the school buildings, from overflowing on plaintiff’s land which lies adjacent to defendant’s premises. Plaintiff contends that the overflow from .the septic tank damages a considerable portion of his land and that this condition has existed for a number of years.

Defendant, for answer, alleged that it was a consolidated school district located in the City of Buffalo, Missouri; that the septic tank in question was one built as a part of the school building and, used to help carry on said school of several hundred pupils; that the septic tank was constructed under the supervision of the said Board of Health of the State of Missouri and so approved by it; that said tank is of a permanent nature and has so been since the year 1939. Defendant denies any overflow but states that if there is any overflow from the septic tank upon the -land of plaintiff that said condition has existed since 1939 and has resulted in an act of appropriation by the school district of the lands so used; that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law for damages for any and all property that might *752 be appropriated; that injunction against defendant would greatly impair the life and efficiency of the school and would greatly impair the health of the several hundred students attending the school.

Upon the written consent of all parties the Honorable L. Cunningham, of Bolivar, Missouri, was, by the Court, duly appointed Referee to hear the case. The Referee, after hearing, recommended to the court that the petition be dismissed. No objection to the Referee’s Report was filed by plaintiff within the time required by law so to do, and thereafter the court, upon examination of the Report of the Referee as well as all evidence taken, dismissed the petition. Judgment was rendered accordingly from which plaintiff duly appeals.

The finding of facts by the learned Referee has been adopted by both plaintiff and defendant. His finding fairly presents the facts, therefore we adope same and set it out as follows: .

“The plaintiff filed his petition in the Circuit Court of Dallas County, Missouri, June 12, 1944, under which he seeks to enjoin the defendant from causing and permitting water and filth from its septic tank to flow onto, over and across the plaintiff’s land.

‘ ‘ The defendant is a public school district, and through its board of education, on the 12th day of April, 1945, filed its amended answer herein, and defends upon the grounds that, in the year 1939, at great expense, constructed upon its premises a certain grade school building and a large septic tank connected with many thousands of feet of tile; that said septic tank was• constructed under the supervision of the State Board of Health and approved by it; that said septic tank is of a permanent nature and is connected with the restrooms in defendant’s school buildings, and that an injunction would greatly impair the life and efficiency of its school and the health of several hundred students “therein, and that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy in an action at law for damages; The defendant denies that any overflow from its septic tank reaches the plaintiff’s land, or if any of it reaches said land, that it is foul and dirty and emits disagreeable odors and is injurious to plaintiff’s land.

“I find from the pleadings, admissions and evidence that the plaintiff’s mother, Rebecca Johnson, at the time of her death in 1915, was the owner of the land involved in this action; that she willed it to her husband for his natural life in trust for their seven children; that her said husband died in January or February, 1941, and that each of said children thereupon became the owner in fee of an undivided one-seventh interest in said land, and that partition thereof among them was made in April, 1944, and the plaintiff thereupon because the owner thereof in fee; that said land consists of thirty-one acres and was, prior to the installation of said septic tank, suitable and valuable for agricultural purposes, and also for sites for homes.

“I further find that the defendant in the year 1938 or 1939, was and now is the owner of five acres lying immediately east and north *753 of plaintiff’s land, and used the same as a site for its school buildings and. for its septic tank and lines of tilfe connecting therewith through which sewage from said septic tank flows; that the defendant, in 1939, constructed a septic tank on its premises and connected it with its school buddings, and extended therefrom twelve lines of tile set eight feet apart and reaching from said septic tank in a westward direction to within three feet of the line between the respective properties of the plaintiff and defendant; that said septic tank and lines of. tile were constructed under the supervision of the State Board of Health and approved by it; that there is no evidence that they were .negligently constructed, or negligently used by the defendant.

“I find that the defendant’s land slopes gradually from its buildings to the plaintiff’s land, and that plaitniff’s land slopes gradually therefrom westward to a branch which flows across plaintiff’s land in a northwesterly direction; that filthy water seeps and flows from the west end of-said lines of tile into, “upon, over and across a strip of plaintiff’s land from fifty to seventy-five feet wide and from five hundred to six hundred feet, extending from the east line of plaintiff’s land to said branch, and that it made, and now makes said strip of land wet, mirey and soggy, and offensive odors rise therefrom, and makes said strip of land unsuitable for cultivation, meadow or pasture and greatly impairs its value for agricultural purposes, and also makes other parts of plaintiff’s land unsuitable for sites for homes. There is no evidence of the amount of the plaintiff’s damages.

“I further find that the defendant has invested in its school buildings about one hundred thousand dollars; that approximately six hundred students attend its schools for nine months of the year; that the grade school connects with said septic tank but it is not clear whether the other school buildings connect with said tank or not, although it appears that the high school building is so connected; that the defendant ordinarily uses about one hundred thousand gallons of water per month while school is in session, and that a large part of it flows through said septic tank. There is no substantial evidence that surface water from defendant’s premises materially affects the amount of water passing onto, or over plaintiff’s'land, or that surface water from, other parts of the City of Buffalo passes over or onto the strip of land described above, or contributes materially to its damage. It appears that if surface water or sewage from other parts of the city reaches plaintiff’s land, it passes south of the strip complained of.

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W.2d 421, 239 Mo. App. 749, 1947 Mo. App. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-independent-school-districe-no-i-moctapp-1947.