Keener v. Sharp

111 S.W.2d 118, 341 Mo. 1192, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 407
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 17, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 118 (Keener v. Sharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keener v. Sharp, 111 S.W.2d 118, 341 Mo. 1192, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 407 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

*1194 TIPTON, J.

This case comes to the writer on reassignment. It was certified to this court by the Sprinfield Court of Appeals, because one of the judges of that court deemed its opinion, reported in 95 S. W. (2d) 648, to be in conflict with the holding of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in the case of Applegate v. Franklin, 109 Mo. App. 293, 84 S. W. 347, and also with our holding in the case of Anderson et al. v. Inter-River Drainage & Levee District, 309 Mo. 189, 274 S. W. 448.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, Missouri, wherein that court enjoined the appellants from maintaining a water gate in a bayou which connects Morris Lake (or Big Lake) in that county with the Mississippi River. Morris Lake is a body of water two or three miles long and possibly a quarter of a mile wide, and lies between the levee of the St. Francis Levee District and the Mississippi River. The appellants own.all the land extending from the west side of the lake east to the river. The respondents own land along the west side of the lake.

The bayou in question is one-half mile long with a winding course. It is about twelve feet in depth near the river and about ten feet in depth at the water gate, and is from twenty to thirty feet wide, 'tapering off in depth and width as it- approaches the lake. On account of the overflow of the river, sediment collected and filled up the bayou where it connects with the lake, leaving it shallow, but still with well-defined banks and channel, so that, except in drought periods, water flows from the lake, through the bayou, into the river. When the river is at certain stages, its waters flow into and through the bayou in question to the lake, then when the river waters recede, the water runs out of the lake, through the bayou, into the river. A government survey of this region made in the year 1848 shows that this bayou was in existence at that time. The lands lying between the levee and the river in the vicinity of the lake consist of farm’s, tracts of timber, and bayous. Some distance north of this lake is a body of water known as Wolf Bayou, fifty or sixty feet deep, which has never been known to go dry. The surplus water of this bayou flows through *1195 a ehain of small bayous into Morris Lake, thence through the bayou in question'and- into the river. Morris Lake is rarely dry and never has been known to be except in extraordinary drought years.

The appellants purchased the land in this vicinity in 1925. At that time there was some valuable timber standing along the east 'edge of the lake. In order to be able to remove the timber, they dug a ditch, or rather, removed the sediment deposited in the bayou near its junction with the lake, so that the timber could be floated from the lake, through the bayou, to the river. That year Morris Lake went dry. Later, the appellants built a water gate in the bayou in question and maintained it so that water would rise in the lake, consequently raising the water on the respondents’ land from twenty-two-inches to four feet. The object of this proceeding is to compel the appellants to remove the water gate, thereby letting the water run off of respondents’ land which they claim could be cleared and put in cultivation. For a more detailed statement of facts, see the ■opinion of the Court of Appeals.

The appellants’ principal assignment of error is that the “ water in Morris Lake as well as the overflow therefrom, is nothing more than surface water against which the landowner has the right -to fight and change the conditions without being liable to be called to account by the adjoining landowners or anyone else. . . .”

“The law seems to be well settled in Missouri that surface water is a common enemy which every man may ward off his land and thus throw it on an adjacent or lower owner, provided he does not, in warding it off, unnecessarily collect it and discharge it to the damage of his neighbor'.- The law is also well settled that water merely overflowing the banks of a river during a flood or freshet and spreading out over the bottom lands is surface water and thus falls within the rule regarding same.

“It is also settled law in Missouri that a natural stream cannot be dammed up nor the waters from its beaten path or bed diverted to the damage of property without compensation therefor. The law as we have thus declared will be found in Goll v. Railroad, 271 Mo. 655, 197 S. W. 244; Inter-River Drainage Dist. v. Ham, 275 Mo. 384, 204 S. W. 723; Abbott v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 271, 53 Am. Rep. 581; Thompson v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Railroad Co., 137 Mo. App. 62, 119 S. W. 509; Walther v. City of Cape Girardeau, 166 Mo. App. 467, 149 S. W. 36; Munkres v. Railroad, 72 Mo. 514; Webb v. Carter, 121 Mo. App. 147, 98 S. W. 776; MeGhay v. Woolston, 175 Mo. App. 327, 162 S. W. 292; Bruntmeyer v. Squaw Creek Drainage Dist., 196 Mo. App. 360, 194 S. W. 748.” [Schalk v. Inter-River Drainage Dist., 226 S. W. 277, l. c. 278. Also, see, Place v. Union Township et al. (Mo. App.), 66 S. W. (2d) 584.]

The important question to determine is whether or not the *1196 bayou in which the appellants erected the water gate, which bayou connects Morris Lake with the Mississippi River, is a natural watercourse. If it is, then the appellants unlawfully dammed up this bayou.

In the case of Munkres v. The Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad Company, 72 Mo. 514, this court approved the following definition of a watercourse:

“A watercourse is a stream or brook having a definite channel for the conveyance of water. It may be made up, more or less, from surface water from rains and melting snow, but after it enters into a channel and commences to flow in its natural banks, it is no longer to be considered surface water, and it is not essential that the water should continue to flow in such stream constantly the whole year round; it is sufficient if the water usually flows in such channel, though not continually. That is, to constitute a branch or stream there must be something more than a mere surface draining, swelled by freshets and melting snow, and running occasionally in hollows and ravines, which are generally dry. The water must usually run in a definite bed or channel, .though it need not flow continually the year round. But although the water from high lands and hills may unite and form a stream with a definite channel, yet if it afterward ceases to remain a channel, but spreads out over the surface of low lands, and runs in different directions in swags and flats without any definite channel, it ceases to be a stream.or watercourse.”

Ye again approved the above definition in the case of Sigler v. Inter-River Drainage District, 311 Mo. 175, 279 S. W. 50. Recently the St. Louis Court of Appeals, in the case of Dardenne Realty Co. v. Abeken et al., 106 S. W. (2d) 966, quoted this definition with approval.

In the case at bar, the substantial evidence shows that the bayou in question is about twelve feet in depth near the river and about ten feet in depth at the place where the water gate is located, and that it tapers off in depth and width as it approaches the lake, but even there it had well-defined banks and channel, though not large, before the ditch was cut by the appellants.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 118, 341 Mo. 1192, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keener-v-sharp-mo-1937.