Knight v. Brown

25 W. Va. 808, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 37
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 25 W. Va. 808 (Knight v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. Brown, 25 W. Va. 808, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 37 (W. Va. 1885).

Opinion

Snyder, Judge :

Action on the ease for damages brought by James L. Knight against William Brown in the circuit court of Mason county. There was a trial by jury, and on September 19, 1882, a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff from which the defendant obtained this writ of error. The principle error assigned is that the court improperly overruled the demurrer to the declaration and each count thereof.

The declaration contains two counts, but as the second is confessedly good if the first is sufficient, it being better both in form and substance than the first, in the view I take of the subject, it is only necessary to notice the latter. The first count in substance avers, that the plaintiff was lawfully seized and possessed of a certain close in said county, and at the time of the committing of the grievances thereinafter mentioned he of right ought to have had and enjoyed and still of right ought to have had and enjoyed said close free from the running of the waters of a certain stream, creek or ravine which all that time ought to have run, flowed and discharged its waters, and until the diversion thereof thereinaf-ter mentioned of right had run, flowed and discharged its waters upon the farm of the defendant, and that the defendant well knowing the premises, but contriving and wrongfully intending to injure and aggrieve the plaintiff in the possession and enjoyment of his said close and to render a certain field, the part thereof adjoining the farm of the defendant, unfit and useless for cultivation, &c., dug and made a certain ditch, drain and channel, beginning at and from a point where said stream, creek or ravine discharged its waters over and upon the farm of the defendant, and extending thence [810]*810about one hundred yards to the said field ot the plaintiff, and that by reason thereof large quantities of rain water and melted snows, ran to, flowed on and were discharged in, over and upon said field, and by reason ot the premises said field was rendered unfit for cultivation, &c., and thereby said close was greatly injured and damaged, and the plaintiff-was compelled to expend large sums of money in draining and carrying oft said rain-water and melted snows so unlawfully turned, diverted, and discharged over and upon said close, &c.

Our statute declares that “No action shall abate for want of form where the declaration sets forth sufficient matter of substance for the court to proceed upon the merits of the case.” Sec..9, ch. 125, Code p. 600.

This declaration in effect avers, that the plaintiff was seized of his close which he was entitled to enjoy “free from the running waters of a certain stream, creek or ravine,” that the defendant wrongfully dug and made a ditch from the place where said stream, creek or ravine entered his land to the place where it re-entered the close of the plaintiff, by reason whereof large quantities of rain water and melted snows were discharged upon the plaintiff’s close. It- is claimed by the defendant, the plaintiff in error, that these averments are insufficient because it is no where charged that any water from said stream, creek or ravine passed through said ditch or was conveyed thereby to the close of the plaintiff; that the injury is averred to result from rain water and melted snows, and not from the waters of said stream, &c.

It must be conceded that this declaration is not free from defects, but I think it contains sufficient substance for the Court to proceed upon its merits. It expressly avers, that until the diversion caused by the ditch made by the defendant, the waters of the stream were discharged upon the land of the defendant, and also that the plaintiff was compelled to expend money in draining and carrying oft the rain water and melted snows so wrongfully turned, diverted and discharged upon the close of the plaintiff. The thing diverted was evidently the waters -of said stream, and the fair inference is that the rain water and melted snows are the waters which flowed in said stream. It is not stated that the rain water and melted snows were the surface water that accumulated on the lands of the [811]*811defendant, but the implication from the context is that these were the waters which flowed in said stream. The words “ diversion ” and “ diverted” can only refer to the waters in the stream, and it is not material whether these waters flowed from a spring or natural water-course, or were accumulated from rains and melted snows. The stream may have been made up by either, and because it was a stream it does not follow that the waters which flowed in it were not rain and melted snows; and, therefore, the damage complained of may have been from the rain water and melted snows which flowed in the stream and not from the accumulated surface waters on the defendant’s land. If the declaration had expressly stated that the rain water and melted snows were the waters flowing in the stream, then the injury complained of would necessarily be the result of the wrongful act of the defendant in diverting these waters, by the ditch, upon the close of the plaintiff. The fair inference being, as we have seen, that these are the waters referred to, the declaration must be regarded as containing this averment, and therefore sufficient;

But if this inference is not correct, the declaration must be held sufficient under the decision of this Court in Gillison v. Charleston, 16 W. Va. 282; because in that case we held, that a party who cuts ditches or drains whereby he collects surface-water and casts it in a body upon the land of another, unless it is so cast in a natural-water course, is liable to an action therefor. In this view the averment that the plaintiff had a right to enjoy his close free from the running water of the stream, might be treated as surplusage. This is not a material part of the declaration in such a case as this. When the plaintiff avers that he is the owner of the land damaged, the law will imply that he is entitled to enjoy it free from any unlawful interference by any one, and if the defendant has a servitude upon it which is inconsistant with the rights of absolute ownership, he must show that as a matter of defence. The law will not presume such servitude and the plaintiff is not bound to aver that it does not exist. 1 Saund. Pt. & Ev. 839, 415. In some cases such averments are necessary. Thus where the act complained of is not inconsistent with the title of the plaintiff, as if the plaintiff claimed damages for obstructing his right of way over the lands of the defendant, [812]*812here he would have to aver that he had such right, because the law would? not presume such right. 4 Rob. New Pr. 814. It is better that such averment by way of inducement should be made in all cases and such is the usual practice! All that we mean to say here is, that it is not always necessary, and that it was not essential in this case.

The only other error assigned is that the court erroneously rejected the defendants plea No. 2. The issues tried were upon the pleas of not guilty and two special pleas. The plea that was rejected attempted to set up as a bar to the action the tact that the plaintiff, by denuding the banks of the stream of the timber and undergrowth along that portion of it which passed through his land before it reached the land of the defendant, caused the banks to fall away and the sand thus produced, to wash into and fill up the stream and be carried by the rain and melted snow on the land of the defendant and thence again upon the land of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 W. Va. 808, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-brown-wva-1885.