Krueger v. Crystal Lake Co.

197 N.W. 675, 111 Neb. 724, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 51
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1924
DocketNo. 23681
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 N.W. 675 (Krueger v. Crystal Lake Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krueger v. Crystal Lake Co., 197 N.W. 675, 111 Neb. 724, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 51 (Neb. 1924).

Opinion

Letton, J.

A permanent injunction was granted by the district court restraining the defendants from diverting and conducting water from a natural watercourse through a conduit and' discharging it into Crystal lake, thereby overflowing certain lands of the plaintiff. Defendants and a large number of-intervening defendants have appealed.

• The’ facts are substantially as follows: Crystal lake, is a natural lake, about seven miles long, the bed of which was formerly the main.channel of the Missouri river. It is somewhat crescent shaped, and is of a character known in the Missouri valley as a “cut-off lake,” that variable and inconstant stream having, as is not infrequent, changed its channel; and, by silting the inlet and outlet, left the old channel, forming a basin, which is partly filled with ’water. In times of flood or high water in the Missouri river, when the flood-waters- reached a certain height, they flowed [726]*726through a natural depression or flood-channel into, and sometimes through, the lake, until the level of the water in the river subsided below the highest point in the flood-channel. This did not happen every year, but it occurred so frequently as to maintain the level of the lake at such a height that it furnished an attractive natural resort. On the banks and around the lake are large groves, both natural and the result of planting. Part of the land adjacent to the lake has been platted into lots, blocks, and streets, many summer cottages have been erected, as well as two hotels and several club-houses. There are five public bathhouses, and a number of amusement buildings and enterprises have been erected. There are seven passenger motor-boats operating upon the lake, and the use of the lake for public and recreation purposes has continued for nearly 30 years. The city of Sioux City, Iowa, is within a very few miles, and there are a number of towns and villages near by. Consequently a large urban population makes use of the facilities for recreation furnished by the lake. The state of Nebraska has stocked its waters with food fish for public use, and its waters have been utilized by one of defendants for the cutting of ice in winter, and by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, which requires large quantities of water daily for the operation of its engines and in its repair shops, which are situated close to the bank of the lake.

From 1910 or 1911, up to the latter part of 1921 and 1922, while the water-level in the lake was lower at different times and at different seasons of the year, it maintained such an average height that its waters could be thus utilized. In 1917 the flood-water filled the lake, and ran into the river again at the lower channel. In 1922 there was deficiency in the usual precipitation, and on account of the access of flood-water from the Missouri river having been cut off by dikes, dams and obstructions erected by farmers and others who desired to prevent the flood-waters from flowing over their lands, and by reason of summer evaporation, the amount of water in the lake became largely di[727]*727minished and the level much lower than normal. This reduction of the water-level exposed and caused to dry from 20 to 35 acres of land belonging to the plaintiff. Part of the land had formerly been covered with water and part of it was ordinarily so permeated with water that cattails, watergrass and other swamp vegetation grew thereon. In 1922 the plaintiff was able to and did bring part of this land into cultivation and he obtained a crop of corn and of potatoes. In 1911 it had been realized by persons interested in maintaining the normal level of the water in the lake that, by reason of obstructions placed in the overflow-channels of the river, the level of the water in the lake had been lowered. The predecessors in interest of defendants were threatening to remove these obstructions and allow the flood-water of the river to flow as they had been wont to do. An action was brought by Mr. Krueger and four other private individuals to procure an injunction to prevent those interested in preserving the lake from removing the dikes and embankments which obstructed the flood-water channel from the river into the lake, or cutting a channel or inlet through them, and from interfering with their strengthening the dikes, embankment, or ridge. Mr. Xrueger, plaintiff here, was one of the plaintiffs in that cast, and he, as one of the principals, signed the bond given to procure the temporary injunction. The temporary injunction was dissolved in 1912. Afterwards another' suit was brought by one Gribble, a riparian owner upon the lake, in which the present plaintiff, and others who were interested in maintaining the artificial obstructions, were made defendants, to enjoin the defendants in that case from erecting or maintaining the dams or dikes, and for a mandatory injunction for their removal. A temporary injunction was issued. Both of these actions were dismissed before a trial, an amicable settlement and contract having been entered into between all the parties interested, whereby the lake was to be fed through a ditch or flood-channel, which had been laid out by an engineer and was to be afterwards constructed at another point, upon the giving of [728]*728a bond in the sum of $5,000 by those interested in the latter suit, to pay damages to certain owners of land if the flow of water was not properly controlled.

The Missouri river, in one of its annual floods, having eroded its banks so as to more closely approach the lake at the point where ’ this artificial channel was to be constructed, the parties interested, fearing that the river in flood-time, on account of this changed condition, might flow into the lake through this ditch and again make the lake the main channel of the river, by tacit agreement went no further with this work. The final result was that, unless in the case of an extraordinary and unusual flood such as occurred one year when an ice gorge had formed in the river, the flood and overflow waters were in large measure prevented from reaching the lake, and its waters diminished so as to expose part of its bed. In this condition of affairs the Crystal Lake Company, the railroad company, and a number of private individuals interested in preserving the lake, adopted the plan of conducting water, through a tile drain or conduit, from a natural watercourse, known as Jackson chute, into the bed of Crystal lake. Subscriptions were made to defray the expense, which was over $26,000. The conduit began to discharge water into the lake early in 1923. The effect of this was to raise the level of the lake to such an extent that the plaintiff was unable to use the land from which the water had receded in 1922. This action was brought by him to restrain the defendants from conducting water through the tile conduit and discharging it into the lake bed.

A large number of legal questions have been raised in the case; the pleadings are numerous, lengthy and involved, but- the legal principles involved are comparatively simple. In the first place, it is clear that the defendants have no legal right to take the waters from a natural watercourse and divert them from their natural channel so as to damage the lands of others, without their consent. “Aqua currit, et debet currere, ut currere solebat.” So that, if the allegations of plaintiff’s petition are borne out by the facts, and [729]*729there are no other controlling circumstances, he would be entitled to a permanent injunction restraining the discharge of water from the conduit into the lake to his damage.

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

Related

Block v. Franzen
79 N.W.2d 446 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1956)
Lackaff v. Bogue
62 N.W.2d 889 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1954)
Clements v. Phœnix Utility Co.
237 P. 1062 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 N.W. 675, 111 Neb. 724, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krueger-v-crystal-lake-co-neb-1924.