Kougl v. Curry

44 N.W.2d 114, 73 S.D. 427, 22 A.L.R. 2d 1039, 1950 S.D. LEXIS 37
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1950
DocketFile 9104
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 44 N.W.2d 114 (Kougl v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kougl v. Curry, 44 N.W.2d 114, 73 S.D. 427, 22 A.L.R. 2d 1039, 1950 S.D. LEXIS 37 (S.D. 1950).

Opinion

*429 SMITH, J.

The right of the defendants to maintain a dike or levee along the boundary line between forty-acre tracts owned respectively by the parties, and thereby to obstruct the natural drainage of surface waters from plaintiff’s tract, was placed in issue by this action. The trial court concluded that the defendants had acquired a prescriptive right to maintain the levee and thereby to free their property from the flow of surface waters from plaintiff’s property. Judgment was entered for defendants and plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff is the owner of the Northwest Quarter (NW1^) of Section Seven (7), Township Ninety-one (91), North, Range Forty-nine (49), West of the 5th P.M., in Union County, South Dakota. Defendants are the owners of the adjoining Southwest Quarter (SWÍ4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE14) of said section. These tracts are almost level, but nature provided for drainage of surface waters to the east and south from plaintiff’s property to defendants’ property down a general slight grade.

A drainage district benefiting the described properties was organized prior to 1915, and a large drainage ditch carrying surfacé waters to the Big Sioux River had been constructed along a course which touched the northeast corner of the described section. Thereafter, to facilitate the drainage of all of section 7 the owners thereof, including the predecessors in interest of plaintiff and defendants, respectively, entered into an agreement in writing, pursuant to which in 1916 they constructed a substantial embankment along the quarter line through the center of said section from north to south, and excavated ditches on both sides thereof to carry water to the north and to the south to the section lines and thence to the big ditch.

Neither party produced a copy of the above mentioned agreement, and secondary evidence of its provisions was not offered.

The described embankment remained in its original state from 1916 to 1944, during which time the right of defendants and their predecessors to maintain the same was in no manner questioned by plaintiff or his predecessors in interest. In 1944, on advice of counsel, plaintiff removed *430 the approximately one-half of the embankment resting on the Southeast Quarter (SEÍ4) of the Northwest Quarter (NWx/4) of Section 7 and made some openings in the half of the embankment resting on defendants’ forty-acre tract in an effort to provide drainage for water then impounded on plaintiff’s property. The defendants promptly closed the openings in their half of the embankment.

Thereafter the parties orally agreed upon a compromise which would provide plaintiff with drainage to the east by a ditch extending along the north line of defendants’ property. Pursuant to that agreement defendants and others constructed a ditch along the line described but did not carry the same far enough west to pierce the embankment. Differences which arose over the manner and extent of plaintiff’s contributions toward this construction, and with reference to the responsibility for connecting the ditch with plaintiff’s property prevented the consummation of the outlined compromise, and this action was brought by plaintiff to force defendants to level their half of the embankment and thus to restore the natural drainage to the east and south. Among other defenses, the defendants pleaded twenty years’ adverse maintenance of the embankment as the basis of a prescriptive right to continue to refuse to receive the flow of surface waters from plaintiff’s tract.

In Thompson v. Andrews, 39 S.D. 477, 165 N.W. 9, 12, this court said, “The law of this state and of the territory from which this state was created has been at all times based on the rule of the civil law, * * * that rule which recognizes that the lower property is burdened with an easement under which the owner of the upper property may discharge surface waters over such lower property through such channels as nature has provided.” And see Quinn v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry., 23 S.D. 126, 120 N.W. 884, 22 L.R.A.,N.S., 789; Johnson v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 71 S.D. 155, 22 N.W.2d 737; and LaFleur v. Kolda, 71 S.D. 162, 22 N.W.2d 741.

The evidence does not make it clear that the natural drainage from plaintiff’s property to defendants’ property is through a watercourse or watercourses as that term is defined in Thompson v. Andrews, supra. The drainage may *431 be of diffused or unregulated surface waters. It has been stated that under the civil law the lower proprietor is not required to receive such water because “there is no such servitude unless there is a,-regulated course in which the water is flowing.” Ill Farnham, Waters and Water Rights. § 889a, p. 2587 (1904) and § 891, p. 2619. But see “Interferences with Surface Waters,” 24 Minn.L.Rev. 891 at 926, Note 163. The case was tried below under the assumption that defendants’ property was originally subject to a servitude to receive surface waters from plaintiff’s property. Without deciding the point we accept that assumption.

As indicated, it is undisputed that the levee was constructed as a part of a drainage system. The plan probably did not contemplate the turning of surface waters back on to plaintiff’s dominant tenement, but as the ditch along the west side of the embankment filled up, water has been intermittently impounded on the upper property. One of the principal functions of the embankment was to relieve the defendants’ property of the burden of receiving surface water from plaintiff’s property, and defendants’ half of it has stood there as a constant, open and notorious barrier to the natural flow of that water since 1916.

The accepted doctrine is that the right to be free from the flow of surface waters may be acquired by the servient tenement by prescription. Ill Farnham, Waters and Water Rights, (1904) § 902, p. 2635; 67 C.J., Waters, § 310, p. 886; Zerban v. Eidmann, 258 Ill. 486, 101 N.E. 925; Mauvaisterre Drainage & Levee District v. Wabash Ry. Co., 299 Ill. 299, 132 N.E. 559, 22 A.L.R. 944; Matteson v. Tucker, 131 Iowa 511, 107 N.W. 600; and Davis v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 147 Tenn. 1, 244 S.W. 483. In our opinion the principle which governs the extinguishment of an easement should control in determining whether such a natural servitude is extinguished. That principle is stated in the Restatement, Property, Division V, Servitudes, § 506, Prescription, as follows: “An easement is extinguished by a use of the servient tenement by the possessor of it which would be privileged if, and only if, the easement did not exist, provided (a) the use is adverse as to the owner of the easement and (b) the adverse use is, for the period of .prescription, continuous *432 and uninterrupted." The period of prescription in this jurisdiction is twenty years. SDC 51.1102; Shearer v. Hutterische Bruder Gemeinde, 28 S.D. 509, 134 N.W. 63.

The argument and brief of plaintiff does not labor the foregoing points. Grounded upon the holding of this court in First Church of Christ, Scientist, v. Revell, 68 S.D. 377, 2 N.W.2d 674

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rotenberger v. Burghduff
2007 SD 19 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2007)
First Lady, LLC v. JMF PROPERTIES, LLC
2004 SD 69 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2004)
Hofmeister v. Sparks
2003 SD 35 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2003)
Thompson v. E.I.G. Palace Mall, LLC
2003 SD 12 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2003)
Kokesh v. Running
2002 SD 126 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2002)
Steiner v. County of Marshall
1997 SD 109 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1997)
Travis v. Madden
493 N.W.2d 717 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1992)
Miiller v. County of Davison
452 N.W.2d 119 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1990)
J. F. Gioia, Inc. v. Cardinal American Corp.
491 N.E.2d 325 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1985)
Shippy v. Hollopeter
304 N.W.2d 118 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1981)
Oppold v. Erickson
267 N.W.2d 570 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1978)
Yeckel v. Connell
508 P.2d 1200 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1973)
Mulder v. Tague
186 N.W.2d 884 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1971)
Heezen v. Aurora County
157 N.W.2d 26 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1968)
Young v. Huffman
90 N.W.2d 401 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1958)
Bruha v. Bocheck
74 N.W.2d 313 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1955)
Loughman v. Couchman
53 N.W.2d 286 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 N.W.2d 114, 73 S.D. 427, 22 A.L.R. 2d 1039, 1950 S.D. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kougl-v-curry-sd-1950.