Marts v. Freeman

136 P. 943, 91 Kan. 106, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 344
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 6, 1913
DocketNo. 18,469
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 136 P. 943 (Marts v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marts v. Freeman, 136 P. 943, 91 Kan. 106, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 344 (kan 1913).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BENSON, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment for damages to growing crops caused by the obstruction of a ditch in a public road. The defendant alleges that the ditch was wrongfully opened by the plaintiif’s father, John Marts, to the defendant’s injury and without lawful right or authority, and prayed for an injunction to restrain the plaintiff from maintaining it.

At the time the ditch was opened the plaintiff’s father owned abutting land on the south side of the road referred to. The defendant owned land abutting on'the north side of the road. The west boundary of the defendant’s land is an extension north of the east boundary of the Marts land. The defendant also [108]*108owned another tract south of the road. Chapman creek runs southwardly through both of the defendant’s tracts. The road'was established in the year 1893. The next year a culvert was placed in the road at a low place crossing the road on the John Marts land, afterward occupied by the plaintiff, and the land next north of it. The culvert is about two thousand four hundred eighty feet west of a bridge over Chapman creek. The low place begins north of the road, and extending southeastwardly and growing wider crosses the east line of the Marts land upon an adjoining tract .of eighty acres. The surface drainage of approximately six hundred fifty acres north of the road is into this low place, finding its way, after filling the depression, to Chapman creek or into a branch flowing into that creek about a mile below the bridge.

In the year 1900 complaints were made to the township officers of water standing along and upon the road which extends across a valley for a considerable distance west of the creek. The plaintiff’s father was desirous of having a ditch constructed along the road which would serve to divert the water passing through the culvert from flowing upon his land. The township trustee and the township board visited the place, and upon examination believed that such a ditch would be a benefit to the road, but doubted their right to construct it without authority from the county commissioners. Later the county commissioners, at a meeting held when the township board were present, investigated the matter and instructed that board to take the water off the road and to make a ditch for that purpose. Mr. Marts, senior, was present and agreed to'pay the expense of making the ditch and also agreed to put a bridge across it to Freeman’s south tract. The county attorney, who was also present, advised that the work should be done under the direction of the road overseer. Afterwards the township board directed the road overseer to put thé ditch on the south side of the.road, [109]*109the defendant objecting to having it made on the north side. The overseer constructed the ditch as deep as it could be made with a road grader. The surface of the ground at and near the bank of Chapman creek being about four feet higher than at the culvert it was found necessary to have the ditch made deeper, and Mr. Marts agreed to deepen it accordingly at his own expense. He performed the work, making the ditch about six feet deep at the outlet, and about two feet deep at the culvert. He threw back the material excavated from the ditch, along its south side and upon his land at the road side, thereby forming a low dike which served to hold the water in the ditch and prevent it from overflowing upon his land except in times of heavy rains or freshets. He also built a bridge for the defendant as he had promised, near the northwest corner of his eighty-acre tract, which the defendant used for many years in going to and from his land. That tract has a frontage of about three hundred twenty feet on the road west of the creek. The ditch was a substantial improvement of the road and carried off the water from ordinary rains. In freshets, however, it still overflowed the low places upon adjacent lands, and at times the dike has been washed away. The defendant repaired the bridge over the ditch at different times, and at one time dug a little ditch across the road to carry surface water from his north tract into the ditch. Evidence was given tending to show that he also assisted in digging the ditch in question.

The ditch grew wider and deeper toward its' mouth by the action of the water until it was fifteen or twenty feet deep and thirty feet wide at the outlet, having cut into the defendant’s land five or six feet near the creek, narrowing toward the west to a point, and taking away about one hundred twenty feet of his fence, and also cut into the road near the bridge. The township authorities restored the road by filling the cut and protecting the north side of the ditch. The defendant, on [110]*110April 10, 1910, after removing what was left of the bridge built for his use, which had fallen down, filled up the ditch at that point, where it was eight or nine feet wide, making a dam to the height of the surface of the ground. He also made another dam across the ditch on the same land. These obstructions caused an overflow upon the plaintiff’s lands resulting in damages, for which he sued; they also caused an overflow of the road near the culvert.

No record appears to have been made of any of the orders or proceedings of the township board or of any of the officers relating to this ditch. •

The plaintiff requested an instruction to the effect that any person who should unlawfully obstruct a county road was liable for resulting damages to any person injured thereby. The defendant, on the other hand, asked for an instruction to the effect that if, after the road overseer had graded the road, the plaintiff dug the ditch and built the dike, in order to prevent surface water from flowing upon his land, such acts were an unlawful diversion, and the defendant would have the right to use such means as he saw fit to prevent such water from encroaching upon his premises.

The court refused these requests and instructed the jury, in substance, that if the ditch and dike were constructed by Marts with the consent and approval of the road overseer, the township.trustee and township board, in conjunction with these authorities, for the common purpose of protecting and improving the road and protecting his land, and the defendant filled up the ditch, and that it was not necessary that he should do so in order to protect his own land, and that such filling caused an -overflow which injured the plaintiff’s crop which would not have occurred but for such obstruction, the defendant was liable for' the resulting dam.ages. Following this another instruction was given, to the effect that if the defendant obstructed the ditch to divert surface water which was flowing upon his [111]*111own land, thereby injuring it, and the surface water • would not have otherwise reached his land, the plaintiff could not recover.

Various specifications of error are presented but they all depend upon a few underlying propositions which will now be considered. It is contended that neither the township officers nor the county commissioners had any authority to authorize the construction of the ditch, although it is suggested that the road overseer may have had that authority under the provisions of section 7285 of the General Statutes of 1909. The statute making the township board commissioners of highways for the township did not take effect until after the ditch was opened.

No specific duty respecting the drainage of roads appears to have been enjoined upon township trustees, although in the act relating to township officers (Gen. Stat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P. 943, 91 Kan. 106, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marts-v-freeman-kan-1913.