Martin v. Gravity Drainage Dist. No. 14 of Parish of St. Landry

143 So. 93
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1932
DocketNo. 997.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 So. 93 (Martin v. Gravity Drainage Dist. No. 14 of Parish of St. Landry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Gravity Drainage Dist. No. 14 of Parish of St. Landry, 143 So. 93 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

LE BLANO, J.

This is a suit for damages against a gravity drainage district, brought by a property owner whose lands are embraced within the corporate limits of the district. The com-iffaint is that the authorities in charge of the district widened and deepened unnecessarily an old artificial ditch on plaintiff’s property, thus taking some of his property without having had to do so. It is alleged that there were 2.18 acres of plaintiff’s property so used, including the excavation and the piling of the spoil dirt on his land adjacent to the' newly constructed canal, for which he seeks to recover the sum of $200. He also claims that the subsoil or spoil dirt from the bottom of the canal has greatly impaired the fertility of the soil on his farm, because of the leaching or spreading of that dirt over his land, causing him further damage in the sum of $100. The gravamen of the plaintiff’s complaint, it would seem, is found in the allegations contained in article XI of his petition, where he avers, in substance, that the drainage canal (referring to another canal) was of ample capacity or could have been made so at slight extra cost, to take care of all the drainage in the district, but the commissioners, “through spite and spleen against him for having opposed the inclusion of his land or any part thereof within the boundaries of the district, determined, without any necessity therefor, to greatly widen and deepen and did dredge, greatly widen and deepen” the said artificial ditch on his property.

We might state now that there is not a bit of testimony in the record to show that the drainage district commissioners were actuated by spite or spleen against any one in following the course they did, and plaintiff’s recovery, if any, has to depend on his ability to show how-much of his land was actually taken in this new project and its actual value. His other claim for impairment to the fertility of his soil has to rest on what proof he has offered to show that he has been damaged to any extent in the manner he alleged.

In its answer, the defendant admits that it excavated the canal on plaintiff’s property *94 and necessarily it had to pile the spoil dirt on the adjacent bank. It avers that the canal to which the plaintiff refers was established on the property, with the consent of the then owner, in the year 1884, and, while it admits that this old canal, which is called “the old ditch” was dredged, it denies that it was made any deeper or wider than was necessary to meet the drainage requirements of plaintiff’s land as well as of all other lands within the district It pleads .estoppel based on plaintiff’s silence and lack 'of protest at the time the work was being done, and pleads further that it was vested by law with control of the canal channel for a distance of 100 feet on each side of same. It also pleads that plaintiff has derived benefits from the canal which are greater than the damages he alleges he has sustained, and finally urges the prescription of ten years under article 765 of the Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 25 of 1904, as a bar to plaintiff’s action.

The district judge, in a written opinion, holds that the canal as presently constructed is no deeper or wider than the old ditch which existed since 1884, and he concludes by stating that “the law and the evidence is clearly with defendant drainage district and the plea of prescription interposed by it' under article 765 of the Civil Code is now maintained and plaintiff’s suit is dismissed at his costs.” ¿’rom that judgment, the plaintiff has appealed.

We do not believe that the article of the Civil Code relied on to support the plea ■of prescription has application in an action of this kind. It deals with a prescription that accrues under a servitude, and there is no question of servitude involved in this suit. The demand is one for the recovery of the value of land taken in unnecessarily widening and deepening an already existing canal and for damages resulting therefrom. As put at issue by the defendant, and as also appears from the testimony, we find no right of servitude claimed, and none is shown. The judgment, in so far as it maintained the plea of prescription, was therefore erroneous, and the plea is now overruled.

Defendant’s plea of estoppel-was not passed on by the trial judge and is not urged before us. The rule seems to be well established, however, that, whilst the owner who permits his land to be entered and used -for a purpose for which it may have been expropriated, cannot maintain an action to dispossess the one who so used it, he nevertheless is not deprived of his right to sue for the value of his land so taken and for the damages he claims to have suffered by reason of the construction or work placed thereon. Hart v. City of Baton Rouge, 145 La. 173, 82 So. 79; St. Julien v. M. L. & T. R. R. Co., 35 La. Ann. 924.

Defendant’s pretended control over plaintiff’s property is based on the provisions of Act No. 61 of 1904. We have examined that statute, and find that it gives to levee and drainage districts in this state control over all public drainage channels, within the limits of their respective districts, and for a space of one hundred feet on each side thereof. Section 2 of the act, which prescribes a penalty for violation of the regulations prescribed by the district, shows clearly that the control so vested has reference only to maintaining the efficiency of the canal after it has been constructed, and cannot in any way be construed as taking away from the property owner his right! to recover the value of his property used in constructing it.

The next contention of the defendant, namely, that the benefit derived by the plaintiff from the canal is greater than the damage alleged to have been sustained, even though it be conceded that there was damage, is readily answered by the following citation from the case of Brittingham v. Board of Commissioners of Drainage District No. 1 of Tangipahoa Parish, 167 La. 368, 119 So. 259, 261: “Defendants seek to offset the damages suffered by plaintiff by the benefits that the remainder of the tract has derived from the enterprise. Defendants are not entitled to such, an offset. Plaintiff is presumed to pay' for these benefits by 'the taxes he pays on the land for the digging of the canal. He cannot be made to pay twice for the improvement — once, by way of taxation, and again, by way of offsetting the damages he has suffered with the benefits that his land has received.”

Having disposed of all other contentions of the defendant, we now come to a consideration of issues on which a solution of the case really depends. A decision rests with the answer that is to be given to these two questions: Has the widening and deepening of the old ditch on the plaintiff’s property resulted in taking more of his property than was included in the old ditch, and has he suffered the damage he claims to the soil on his farm by reason of -the leaching or spreading of the spoil dirt thereon?

Answering, these" questions in the reverse order, we state without much hesitation that plaintiff failed to show that he has sustained any damage in the way he claims. He testified that the dirt excavated from the bottom of the canal is a red clay soil, that being the last dirt taken, it was deposited on the top of the embankment, and that, when it rains, this red clay is washed over his farm, leaving a visible stain. At the time of the trial he stated that it extended about twenty feet.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-gravity-drainage-dist-no-14-of-parish-of-st-landry-lactapp-1932.