Kevin Dietrich, Denise Dietrich and Seth Dietrich, a Minor Child v. Harold C. Goodman Jr., Winford J. Goodman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 2003
Docket14-01-01168-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Dietrich, Denise Dietrich and Seth Dietrich, a Minor Child v. Harold C. Goodman Jr., Winford J. Goodman (Kevin Dietrich, Denise Dietrich and Seth Dietrich, a Minor Child v. Harold C. Goodman Jr., Winford J. Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin Dietrich, Denise Dietrich and Seth Dietrich, a Minor Child v. Harold C. Goodman Jr., Winford J. Goodman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Affirmed and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed July 24, 2003

Affirmed and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed July 24, 2003.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-01-01168-CV

KEVIN DIETRICH, DENISE DIETRICH, and SETH DIETRICH, a minor child, Appellants

V.

HAROLD C. GOODMAN, JR. and WINFORD J. GOODMAN, Appellees

On Appeal from the 165th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 99-41790

D I S S E N T I N G   O P I N I O N


Because the flood waters in this case ran through a gully and a few inches of a man-made trench before entering the Goodmans= property, the Court holds they could divert them with impunity.  Conceding this absurd result is at odds with the express words of the Texas Water Code, the Court holds we are confined by opinions of our sister courts declaring water diverted into a watercourse or touched by mankind no longer Asurface water.@  I disagree that our sister courts have ever applied such rules to facts like these.  Moreover, the Supreme Court of Texas and this Court have adopted a different rule that governs here.  Because the Court turns aside from that rule, I respectfully dissent.

Generally, Texas law prohibits a landowner from burdening adjacent lands with water except in the same manner in which it would naturally flow.[1]  Thus, a lower estate is obliged to receive water in a natural watercourse (such as a stream or creek), even if those waters have been augmented by runoff from an upper estate.[2]  Similarly, a lower estate is obliged to receive surface waters as they naturally flow from an upper estate,[3] but not obliged to do so if they have been channeled by the hand of man.[4]

Nevertheless, the Texas Supreme Court and this Court long ago adopted a modified rule in urban settings, where extensive development makes it difficult or even impossible to establish how water Anaturally@ flowed.[5]  As this Court recognized, Asurface water@ in such areas is not confined to natural (that is, prehistoric) contours:


In an urban environment such as Harris County, the natural flow may have been changed numerous times before there is any litigation on the subject.  Thus, to force plaintiffs in such actions to prove the natural flow of surface water Auntouched by the hand of man@ in an urban setting, would frequently deprive such litigants of an adequate remedy.  The Restatement of Torts Section 833, comment a (1939) defines interference with the flow of surface water Aas an obstruction, diversion or alteration of what has theretofore been regarded as the natural or normal flow of surface waters in the particular place where the interference occurs.@  Thus, it is the normal or natural flow of surface water at the time of diversion that should determine the rights of the parties in an urban area.[6] 

While both courts were addressing common-law negligence actions, the absence of a statutory definition of surface water indicates the common law definition should apply.[7] Moreover, the Supreme Court has held the statute was intended to eliminate differences between the civil and common law so that Athe civil law rule as to surface water would henceforth govern all property.@[8] 

There is no question in this case what that normal flow wasCthe developer of this subdivision constructed a storm sewer drain (no doubt at considerable expense) to receive runoff from the recreation area and channel it through the drain at the rear of the Goodman=s property. Whoever covered up the drain clearly diverted the normal flow of surface water in a manner that damaged the Dietrichs= property.[9]


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Kevin Dietrich, Denise Dietrich and Seth Dietrich, a Minor Child v. Harold C. Goodman Jr., Winford J. Goodman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-dietrich-denise-dietrich-and-seth-dietrich-a-minor-child-v-harold-texapp-2003.