Meyers v. Vermillion

7 Ohio N.P. 90, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 90
CourtLicking County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ohio N.P. 90 (Meyers v. Vermillion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Licking County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyers v. Vermillion, 7 Ohio N.P. 90, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 90 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

SewaRD, J.

This is a suit brought by Frank Meyers to obtain an order restraining the township trustees and the person in charge of the road from cutting an embankment on the west side of the Black Hand road, north of where it intersects the Newark & Zanes-ville road, and from permitting the water, which collects on the west side of the road, as he says, from entering a swamp or depression in his ground and injuring it for farming purposes.

There was considerable testimony taken and the witnesses are not in entire agreement. According to the view that is taken by the court, the topography of the land there indicates that the water, if not interfered with, would pass northerly from the land in controversy to the west, at least from the center of the road, and probably a portion on the east side of the road. A little south of that, the surface water, if left unimpeded, would flow a little to the southwest. At the southeast corner of Meyer ⅛ land there is a depression in the ground — rather a swampy place — where the water collects, and there is no way of getting it out except by tiling it to the southwest corner of his farm, ■where there is a culvert under the road entering Brushy Fork creek. This road intersects the Zanesville & Newark road. The water collects on each side of this road. North of the house of Meyers is a culvert which conducts the water from the west to the east side of the road, from which point it follows the road down to the intersection of the Newark & Zanesville road. South of that culvert, and north of Meyers’ house — a distance of about 1,700 feet as I recollect it — the water collects along the side of the road by reason of the township trustees or the persons in charge of the road having worked it and thrown it up, and used a scraper or road-grader; it collects along the side of the road, and is sent southward to the point where it intersects the Newark & Zanesville road. That has been the case for substantially thirty' or thirty-five years. I think the testimony shows that, although two witnesses claim that it was not that way two years ago; but from -the testimony the court concluded that that condition of affairs has existed there thirty or thirty-five years, if not longer. Formerly there was a culvert under the Black Hand [92]*92road, where it intersects the Newark & Zanesville road, which took that water across to the west side of the road, and from there it was .conducted two or three hundred feet to a culvert going across to and under the Newark & Zanesville road to a ditch through McCracken’s land to the Brushy Fork creek.

It is claimed that there is sufficient fall from the west side from the Black Hand road, where it intersects the Newark & Zanesville road, to take this water to a culvert about 1,100 feet west of where .the intersection of these two roads takes place; and there to precipitate it out .into Brushy Fork creek. I think the testimony tends to show that there is a sufficient fall, if the ditch is made and kept open, to take the water to that point— about 1,100 feet — without very much expense; .and it is quite certain that there is sufficient fall on the east side of where the road intersects the Newark & Zanesville road to take the water that collects on the east side of the road, running south, and the water that is sent through the culvert, if one is built to the intersection of the culvert under the road which goes through McCracken’s land, and from there to Brushy Fork creek; 'or to take it to the Brushy Fork creek along the road. I think that could be done. It is quite certain that this water that is precipitated into this depression in McCracken’s land does not get out of there except by evaporation.

The questions of law involved in this case are as to the rights of the owners of the dominant estate to have the. water pass on to the servient estate, and whether it is necessary for the servient' estate to take care of the water.

The court is satisfied that this water north of the house of Meyer, if left unimpeded, will pass in a southwesterly direction, and probably then enter into a spring drain and go from there to this culvert, which is 1,100 feet west of the intersection of the road.

Have the township trustees the right to collect the water- and precipitate it upon the land of the plaintiff where it would enter into this depression Í There is testimony .tending to show that, in a dry season this land has been farmed and that a good crop of corn has been raised there; that it is farmed around the rim of the basin.

[93]*93Have the township trustees the right to cut the embankment which lies west of the road and let the water in that will flow down and upon the land of the plaintiff? Have they the right to do that in the improvement of the road? They undoubtedly have the right to improve the road and to make this ditch; but, have they a right to go into this1 man’s land and cut a ditch in three places in this embankment, and precipitate the increased flow of water during the rainy season into this basin upon his land? It is claimed that no water goes there except the water that falls on the west side of the road. But if that water would naturally flow in a thin sheet over his land, hasn’t he a right -to have it go there? Have the trustees, after the water had been going down that road for a number of years, the right to go onto the road and cut these places at three different points in that ditch and precipitate water into this depression?

The plaintiff cites the 108 Northwestern, page 108, which is a highway case. The court will refer .to these eases briefly.

“A servient estate is'bound to take the natural flow oí surface water; the owner of the dominant one can not collect it and pass it onto the lower proprietor in a different manner from which it flows by nature, nor may he materially increase the quantity thereof to the injury of the lower land.”

On the same page the court in reasoning out the case, say:

“It is the law of this jurisdiction that, while the servient estate is bound to take the natural flow of surface water the owner of the dominant one can not collect it and cast it upon the lower proprietor in a different manner than it flowed by nature, nor may he materially increase the quantity thereof to the injury of the lower land. ’ ’

In the 25 Northeastern, page 689, Young v. Commissioners of Highways, is a case involving the power of the commissioners of highways. At page 689 the court say:

“The commissioners of highways have not the right in draining a road to collect and carry along the road a quantity of. water which would naturally drain off in .another direction, and discharge such accumulated water on an adjoining farm.”

At page 693, the court, in reasoning out the case, say:

[94]*94“The commissioners of highways, where they undertake to drain a public highway, possess the same right, and are to be governed by the same rules, as adjoining land-owners who may undertake to drain their land, exeept where they may proceed under eminent domain laws of the state. In Peck v. Herrington,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio N.P. 90, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-vermillion-ohctcompllickin-1907.