Lynn v. Rainey

400 P.2d 805
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 1965
Docket40429
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 400 P.2d 805 (Lynn v. Rainey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynn v. Rainey, 400 P.2d 805 (Okla. 1965).

Opinion

BERRY, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment granting plaintiffs a mandatory injunction based upon written findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the trial court in response to request therefor.

The asserted issues upon which the case was tried eventually were formed by plaintiffs filing their second amended reply to the amended answer and second amended answer to defendants’ cross-petition. An important part of the evidence was introduced by means of aerial maps and drawings of the areas involved, all of which appear in the record as black and white photographic exhibits. Unfortunately no legend is furnished, and the testimony elicited from the witnesses fails to identify the different areas depicted by colored lines and symbols, thus reducing the value of this evidence.

In order to provide a comprehensive statement, the following summation is furnished to reflect the factual background which gave rise to the issues dispositive of this cause.

So far as we are here concerned, plaintiffs became joint owners of the NE/4 of Sec. 2, Township 23 North, Range 3 East, in Osage County on July 22, 1950. Plaintiffs have not occupied this land but live a substantial distance away. At such time the adjoining NW/4 was owned by one Morris, father of one of defendants, who became joint tenants of the NW/4 by warranty deed dated September 30, 1954. The plaintiffs are husband and wife as are the defendants, and herein reference, either singular or plural, should be understood to include both spouses.

In 1951 plaintiff cleared and burned the timber and at that time, with assistance of the Soil Conservation Service, had certain work performed which changed the natural surface of his land. A portion of this work consisted of changing the surface contour from the low area on the east in order to drain the land toward the west. This was accomplished by excavation of a ditch west across plaintiffs’ land and apparently was done with knowledge of defendants’ predecessor in title. Whether this excavation involved clearing and deepening of an existing channel or excavation of a new waterway is a subject of sharply conflicting evidence, to which we shall allude hereafter.

In 1959 both plaintiff and defendant conferred with representatives of the Osage County Soil Conservation District, and eventually it was agreed that a representative would visit the properties and make a study of the water problem. A meeting was held on July 23, 1959, and a survey conducted of the premises in order that recommendations might be made. This representative testified the parties conferred with him on that date and that he outlined plans for handling drainage of the area by advancing three alternatives. These alternatives were: (1) Build a waterway down the drainage channel and across defendants’ land. This plan was unacceptable because of defendants’ desire to farm the land; (2) Build a diversion terrace running west and north around defendants’ property to a bridge at the north side of the farm. This plan was rejected since it was the longest route and required moving the water through the timber; (3) Pick up one of the terraces built years before and route the water generally north from where it came onto defendants’ land and then in a westerly direction to the northwest corner of the farm near defendants’ house. The witness testified the Soil Conservation Service plan was to concentrate the drainage from other land to be drained across defendants’ land.

*808 The representative testified he advised defendants the latter plan was not as feasible as the others. However, he agreed to aid such plan if defendants permitted the water to continue down the waterway and kept it out of the new diversion route until same was covered adequately with Bermuda grass to prevent erosion. This testimony was denied by defendant, who testified he was advised by the Soil Conservation representative to build this waterway in order to divert the water coming from plaintiffs land and flowing around defendants’ house. Defendant also denied the representative advised that he would have to plant Bermuda grass. Parenthetically, we note that October ordinarily is not considered the most appropriate time for planting and growing grass in this region.

Plaintiff completed the drainage program upon his own land as outlined by the Soil Conservation representative, part of which entailed building of a dam across the drainage channel near the center of the land. A 36-inch conduit was installed in such dam to retard the accumulated flow of water crossing plaintiffs’ farm and onto defendant. On October 2, 1959, a heavy rain fell in the immediate area. The drainage from plaintiffs’ land flowed onto and over defendants’ farm, seriously eroded and damaged some portions, washed out access roads, including defendants’ means of reaching the public highway for approximately six months, and destroyed ingress and egress to defendants’ house other than by traveling northwest across a field to the corner of his farm.

Defendant thereafter built a crescent-shaped, earthen dam upon his own land west of the point where water entered, thereby blocking the flow and causing water to back up onto plaintiffs’ land. Plaintiffs then filed the present action seeking mandatory injunction directing defendants to remove the dam or to provide a sufficient opening therein to permit water to flow without standing on plaintiffs’ land. The trial court viewed the premises and, after extended trial, rendered findings of fact and conclusions of law upon which the judgment appealed from was rendered. The following statement sufficiently reflects matters necessary to consideration of the controlling issues.

The evidence fairly establishes the matters hereinafter related. The general terrain of the area was such that natural drainage from the north, east, and to some extent the south, deposited surface water upon the east 80 acres of plaintiffs’ farm. This formed a landlocked lake, or pond, covering a portion of the land at certain times and for varying periods of the year. Size of the lake varied according to the rainfall and general weather conditions, but caused a substantial area of plaintiffs’ farm to be unproductive. Other evidence bearing upon the nature and condition of this land prior to plaintiffs’ acquisition thereof is noted hereafter.

Prior to 1951 water would stand on the east part of plaintiffs’ land a great deal of the time, and during the rainy season the water would back up across the road north. The inundated area was estimated by different witnesses whose estimates varied from 5 to 30 areas. Some witnesses had hunted ducks on the lake in earlier years. One witness who farmed the land in 1949-50 had deepened a pond or “dugout” on the south side in an attempt to concentrate and drain, or “thief”, the water by dispersing it into a sand strata. When the 1959 work began there were three ponds or “dugouts” on the land. A number of witnesses, all familiar with the area and plaintiffs’ land in particular, and whose knowledge in some instances covered more than three decades, testified concerning the general terrain, the drainage and the long-continued existence of a recognizable lake on plaintiffs’ premises. This condition had existed for many years prior to plaintiffs’ acquisition of the land.

Another witness, a Conservation Aide for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, had worked on the land prior to 1951.

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Bluebook (online)
400 P.2d 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-rainey-okla-1965.