Lamb v. Stone

178 Iowa 1268
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 178 Iowa 1268 (Lamb v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb v. Stone, 178 Iowa 1268 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Gaynor, C. J.

1. Waters and WATERCOURSES : surface waters: drainage: non-increased flow-age on servient . estate. This is an action to enjoin defendants from maintaining' a ditch upon their lands which, it is claimed, will have the effect of discharging water from a slough running through their lands, onto plaintiff’s land.

The defendant Colgan is .the owner of the NW *4 of Section 17, and the W y2 of the SW 1/4 of Section 17. The defendant Stone is the owner of the ~Wy2 of the SW 1/4 of Section 8. The defendant Fisher was employed by the defendant Stone to dig the ditch in 1893, and has no interest in maintaining it, and no control over its continuance. John IT. Witherbee is the owner of the W y2 of the E y2 of Section 17, and the E y2 of the SW ^4 of Section 17. The plaintiff owns the N % of Section 20, and the N y2 of the S % of Section 20. There is a slough crossing the land of the defendants and Wither-bee, starting north of the north line of Section 17, and extending up into the Stone land in Section 8, then south in a southeasterly direction to near the east line of Section 17 in the NE % of the SE 1/4, turning thence south and a little to the west, reaching plaintiff’s land at its north section line, about 40 rods east of the east section line.

The ditch complained of starts at a point in the slough slightly north of the south line of the NE ]4= °f Section 17, then runs south, directly to a point near the south line of the NW 14 of the SE */4 of Section 17, and empties near the center of the SE 14 of Section 17. The length of this ditch, therefore, is about 80 rods, and the extreme point is nearly 80 rods from the north line of plaintiff’s land. The point of discharge from the ditch is on the Witherbee land. The ditch was made with the consent of Witherbee. The ditch extends a little into the slough at the point where it starts. It is a very shallow ditch, one plow furrow in the slough at [1270]*1270the north end of the ditch. The ditch cuts through the bank at the point where it leaves the slough, and, as it extends to the south, runs out to the surface of the ground at the south end, about 80 rods north of the public highway between Sections 17 and 20. The elevation given at the public highway is marked 7, and the elevation at the mouth of the ditch, 80 rods north, is marked 7. The ground is a little irregular between the mouth of the ditch and plaintiff’s land, but only slightly so. It is practically level.

Plaintiff’s engineer testified:

“It is a fact that the land at the mouth of the ditch both east and west and south of the mouth is so nearly level that it-requires an instrument and picture of places to find any difference in the elevation.”

The general surface of the ground there is almost level. The general slope of all the ground is slightly to the south. The elevation through which the ditch was cut was formed by a deposit of silt. There is testimony to the effect that the slough nearly always contained water, — in dry weather, sometimes not; and never overflowed except in times of high rain, but then never drained out entirely. Plaintiff testifies:

‘ ‘ There is very little variation in the level of this ground south of this lake. The general tendency of the whole slope is to the south, with a fall not to exceed one foot to the mile. ’ ’

Another witness testified that, when the water from the slough spread out over the land south of the slough, the land was so level and fiat that “it just stays there.”

The ditch complained of was about 3 feet deep in its deepest place, and gradually grew shallower as it proceeded southward, until, at the point where it emptied, it was level with the ground. The water at the south end of the ditch was turned loose upon the meadow, and, we should judge from the elevation appearing on the plat, would flow from the mouth of the discharge east, west, and south, over the south 40’s. From a point at least 60 rods north of the point of discharge, the elevations shown upon the plat indicate the [1271]*1271land to be perfectly level until the point of discharge is reached. At that point, there seems to be a slight elevation. This is accounted for by the deposit of silt, which it is claimed was deposited by overflows, and it is through this that the ditch was cut.

If we are to credit the plat furnished us by plaintiff’s engineer, we find that, at a point about 60 rods north of the discharge, the elevations are given 81, 81, 81, south to the point of discharge, marked 81.5. The next level we have is about 40 rods below that, marked 81.5, and this elevation continues on down to plaintiff’s land, where, it would seem, the elevation is slightly higher, being marked 81.6. On the north line of plaintiff’s land, north of the highway between Sections 17 and 20, directly south of this ditch, the elevations are given 81.5, 81.9, 81.8, 82.6 and 82.4. We give these elevations because of the conclusion we must reach from this record. The plat does not furnish us elevations east and west of the line of this ditch, but the evidence shows that there is a slight incline to both the east and west, from a line drawn south from the mouth of the ditch, and these were all on Witherbee’s land.

“The area of the lake bed is somewhere from 30 to 40 acres of land. This lake bed had been covered with water so that it would not produce any vegetation. The extreme depth from the lake bed to the vegetation line would be in the neighborhood of a foot and a half. The south end of the lake is higher than the north end.”

Lamb testified:

‘ There is very little variation in the level of this ground south of this lake. The general tendency of the whole slope is to the south, with an overfall of about a foot to the mile. This slough has no outlet. It was the receptacle simply of surface water.”

Plaintiff further testified:

[1272]*1272“The land near the mouth of the ditch is as near level as you can imagine land to be.”

The testimony of Fisher, who dug the ditch, is to the effect that in the deepest place it was about three feet. After leaving the lake bed, it gradually became shallower, until it ran out on the surface of the ground. The deepest place in the ditch was about 400 to 600 feet south from the lake.

There was evidence to the effect that, when water overflowed the banks of this slough in times of excessive rain, the overflow went out at the south end of the lake and spread over the ground there; went out over its banks; that it went south and west. This would be onto plaintiff’s land.

We take it that the ditch was open at the lowest point in the slough, the purpose being to keep the slough dry. It appears that this was the effect of the ditch in low water. No purpose would be accomplished by these defendants in the making of the ditch, unless it did drain the slough.. The purpose of the ditch, if it accomplished any purpose, was to keep the slough dry in times of low water by a very slow process. The water from the slough in times of high water, it could not take care of. Its capacity was not great enough for that.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Iowa 1268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-stone-iowa-1917.