McLellan v. Brownsville Land & Irrigation Co.

103 S.W. 206, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 249, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 103 S.W. 206 (McLellan v. Brownsville Land & Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLellan v. Brownsville Land & Irrigation Co., 103 S.W. 206, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 249, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 67 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

Appellant sought to recover damages arising from the destruction of his sorghum and cotton crops in the year 1904, by water which was collected by appellee from the Bio Grande and caused to flow over his land. The cause was tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee.

The facts do not present a case where a calamity has suddenly come upon a party, and the evil effects of which he has used no efforts to mitigate or avert, but it is a case in which a citizen who has had land leased for several years, plants his crop on that land, although since he leased the land a corporation has placed an irrigation plant in proximity to his land. Was it his duty to refrain from the use of his land or to build embankments to protect his crops from an anticipated flow of water from the irrigation plant? Those are the questions we endeavor to answer in the following opinion.

The court charged the jury as follows: "If you believe from the evidence that the Tule Grande, upon which the plaintiff was engaged, in 1904, was at the time he planted his crops thereon of cotton and sorghum a well defined, known and recognized lake, natural basin or depression into which the rainfall, storm overflows and drainage waters from the surrounding country flowed and was accustomed to there accumulate and stand, and that same was well known to *252 plaintiff at that time; that his crops thereon planted during the year 1903 were destroyed by water flowing into and collecting in said Tule Grande; and you believe that with such knowledge (if any) his planting upon the land of the said Tule Grande was a failure to use such care as a person of ordinary prudence would have used under the same or similar circumstances, and was negligence, and that such negligence (if any) contributed to or caused the destruction of the plaintiff’s growing crops (if they were destroyed) the plaintiff could not recover herein and your verdict will be for the defendant.” To paraphrase the charge: “If you find that the plaintiff planted his crop on his land in 1903 and had it destroyed by the natural overflow of the waters, he could not recover for the destruction of his crops in 1904 although the crop was not injured by any natural overflow, but was destroyed by the acts of defendant in pumping water out of the Rio Grande in such quantities that it overflowed plaintiff’s land.” Such a proposition of law cannot be entertained for a moment. It would not matter how negligent and careless appellant may have been in planting his crop in a depression which was subject to overflow, that carelessness would not authorize any person to turn water into the depression and destroy the crop. Á person might negligently place himself on a track from which he had once been knocked by a locomotive, but that carelessness would not authorize a person to shoot him off the track. A man might have his crop destroyed time and again by cattle on account of his defective fences, but that would not authorize any one to gather a lot of cattle and drive them into the crop and destroy it. It may have been a very short-sighted and ill-advised policy on the part of appellant to plant his crops in a valley where the natural surface water might destroy it, and yet that did not give a license to appellee to collect water from a river and then turn it loose and let it flood and destroy appellant’s crops. If carelessness and a lack of reason and discretion placed a person in a position to be injured by any man whose interest it might be to destroy his property, a large portion of the world would be at the mercy of the other portion. What if appellant had acted unreasonably in planting his crops in a natural basin where, water was as prone to flow “as the sparks to fly upward” upon what principle of law could that fact preclude him from recovery of _ damages resulting from the tortious acts of another in flooding and destroying his crops? The charge is clearly without legal warrant, and the court should have entertained the exception to that portion of the answer that formed the basis of the charge. The issue in the case was, did appellee by its negligence flood and destroy or damage the crops of appellant, regardless of whether crops had been destroyed by natural overflows prior to that time or not. That such natural overflows had taken place did not remove appellant beyond the pale of the protection of the law against the wanton or negligent acts of other persons.

The following charge was given by the court: “If you believe from the evidence that when the plaintiff, in 1904, planted his crops of cotton' and sorghum on the land of the Tule Grande he knew that the drainage and other ditches and the reservoir or lake, *253 all as complained of in bis petition, had already been constructed and existed, and that the natural flow . (if any) of the water from the rice fields adjacent and tributary to said drainage ditches would cause an overflow of the land so planted by him, and cause the destruction of his crops thereon grown, unless the land on which he planted was protected by proper levees and earth embankments; and you further find and believe from the evidence the plaintiff failed to erect or construct such levees or embankments, and that such failure (if any) to erect or construct the same was negligence, and that such negligence (if any) contributed to or caused the destruction of his growing crops (if they were destroyed) then the plaintiff cannot recover herein, and you will find a verdict for the defendant.” In other words the charge was that if appellant knew before he planted his crops that the drainage ditches erected by appellee, would flood his land and probably destroy his crops, that he could not recover' for the destruction of his crops unless he had built proper levees to protect his crops, regardless of what it might cost to build such levees or embankments and regardless of the damage that might be inflicted on contiguous property. Appellant sought to qualify the charge by an instruction to the jury that the duty of building the embankments did not devolve on appellant unless it appeared: “1st. That the plaintiff, with the means at his disposal, could have constructed said levees or embankments. 2nd. That he .could have done so by moderate expense and ordinary effort and care. 3rd. That the construction of said levees would not have resulted in injury to contiguous land or property.”

The requested charge was refused by the court and the jury left to find appellant negligent in not building the embankments, even though it could only be done at an enormous expense and even though it may have subjected him to suits for damages by owners of contiguous property.

It is a general rule of the law that a plaintiff is required to lessen, or avoid altogether, damages about to be inflicted, when it can be done by the exercise of ordinary care. He is not compelled, however, to anticipate that some one else will be guilty of negligence and injure or destroy his property. He is not called upon to guard against damages that might possibly arise from the acts of another so long as there is any uncertainty that the damages will be inflicted. If he sees that his property is about to be damaged, he should use ordinary care in mitigating or averting altogether the impending evil, but he is not called upon to act upon a possible or contingent calamity. In the case of the person the law requires one to anticipate danger, but in the case of property, the law does not require the owner to act until the danger is active.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W. 206, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 249, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclellan-v-brownsville-land-irrigation-co-texapp-1907.