Obe v. Pattat

130 N.W. 903, 151 Iowa 723
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 6, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 130 N.W. 903 (Obe v. Pattat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Obe v. Pattat, 130 N.W. 903, 151 Iowa 723 (iowa 1911).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The plaintiff owns the west half of the southwest quarter of section 34, township 87, range 25,. [724]*724.and defendants the one hundred and sixty acres lying immediately east of the described tract. The petition alleges that beginning about midway on the south boundary of defendant’s land a natural water course extends in a northwesterly direction until it nears the east line of plaintiff’s land and continues to and beyond the north boundary of said lands, along which course the natural drainage of surface waters is conducted; plaintiff’s premises being protected therefrom by a ridge or watershed upon the west side of defendants’ premises. He further alleges that the defendant (Pattat) and his tenant (Welty) have constructed a ditch by which the natural flow of said waters ■has been diverted to the westward upon his land to his 'material injury, and he prays an injunction against the .alleged nuisance. The defendants admit the ownership o'f the lands as alleged, but deny all other allegations of the petition.

The record discloses a distinct failure of proof with respect to the allegation that the natural flow of the drain'age is to the north, as well as the further claim that k ridge or watershed extends north and south along or near the west side of the land of the defendants. It does appear that at some time in the past a ditch had been constructed extending northward from the area now under consideration, but proved to be an engineering failure from want of sufficient fall to carry off the water. But the engineers produced by both plaintiff and defendants, while differing somewhat in the measurement of certain elevations, unite in ’saying that the natural flow from defendant’s land is west or northwest across the land of plaintiff and to the territory beyond. In this they are corroborated by the decided preponderance of nonexpert evidence. As is quite frequently the case in lands which are somewhat flat, there are, or originally were, on both these farms depressions below the general surface constituting sloughs or ponds; but the drainage therefrom is naturally discharged [725]*725through a swale or water course to the west substantially as shown on the following plat:

Speaking of the course of drainage, plaintiff’s engineer, after describing the two ponds or chains of sloughs on the defendants’ land, says: “The water from these two chains of ponds all crosses Obe’s land and flows off to the west. It is about two hundred feet where they meet on Obe’s land to the west of his east line. ... It crosses Obe’s land to the west, and thence goes in a westerly direction. There is a well-defined water course. Prom Obe’s east line to the tile on Welty’s land is about one thousand two hundred and sixty feet. All the water on Welty’s lan'd drains onto Ohe’s land and _from there to the west. No water flows naturally to the north. It all flows naturally to the west.”

In argument counsel for appellee do not contend very •strenuously for the correctness of the claim that the true course of drainage is to the north; but they say that even if the flow be to the west, as defendants claim, and plaintiff’s estate be held to be servient to the defendants’ with respect to the natural drainage, yet the effect of the ditch [726]*726of which he complains is to cast the water upon him in a different way and in larger quantities than would otherwise be the case, and that under the rule applied in Livingston v. McDonald, 21 Iowa, 160, and cases of that class, he is entitled to relief against such burden. Reduced to brief terms, the claim is that at the point “B” on the plat there is a ridge extending' from northeast to southwest which under natural conditions would turn the water on the east and south of such ridge northward into pond “D,” but that defendant, by laying a line of tile from the southeast through the ridge at “B,” diverts such water into pond “0.” In this manner such drainage reaches the pond or depression “E” on plaintiff’s land by a shorter and more direct route than if left to pursue its natural course around the longer arc or chain. It is claimed, too, if we comprehend the record, that defendant has deepened the channel or way at point “E,” thus increasing the flow from pond “D.” As has already been noted, the tile of which plaintiff complains nowhere approaches his land, and the place of its discharge according to the engineers is from fifty-five to seventy rods east of his east line. As against the position of the plaintiff, defendants insist that as owners of the dominant estate .they have the right to drain their lands into the water courses and depressions through which surface waters and overflows naturally escape; that the ditches complained of are wholly upon their own land and in no manner encroach upon the land of the plaintiff; and that in all they have done they are clearly within the right conferred upon every landowner by the statute. Code Supplement, section 1989-a53.

Since the decision of Livingston v. McDonald, 21 Iowa, 160, numerous cases involving the law of surface waters have come before this court for consideration. In many instances that precedent has been approved and followed, and in others it has been distinguished or held inapplicable. The tendency of the holdings is to recognize [727]*727neither the rule of the common law nor the. role,- o-f the civil law as being in all cases controlling to .the..; exclusion of the other. See Livingston v. McDonald, supra; Vannest v. Fleming, 79 Iowa, 641; Matteson v. Tucker, 131 Iowa, 511, and cases there cited.

SURFACE WATER: damages. i Drainage of But, in the absence of any statute affecting-the situation, the doctrine of the civil law has been ■ inore frequently applied in cases of drainage of agricultural-lands, construed by .the court, that rule, so far as it applies to the case before us, is that, while the owner of the dominant estate may insist on the surface waters having free flow from his lands in accordance with natural conditions and may himself interfere with such flow so far as the same is affected by the ordinary operations of good husbandry, he can not lawfully collect into a mass and discharge upon his neighbor’s premises “in greatly increased or unnatural quantities to the substantial injury of the latter.” The quoted phrase is from Judge Dillon’s opinion in the Livingston case, and, accepting it as the essence of the doctrine of that oft-quoted precedent, it is undoubtedly still the law except as limited or changed by subsequent legislative action. As thus stated, it will be observed that to call the law into action for the defense of the servient estate, the collection ■and discharge, of water thereon in other than the place of its normal flow with the land in a state of nature it must be in “greatly increased or unnatural quantities,” and that the damages which will sustain a right of action for such alleged wrong must be “substantial” in character. In other words, the general doctrine which recognizes a merely technical invasion of one’s premises or the infliction of a merely nominal injury as sufficient grounds for invoking the remedies of the law has here no application. To lay it down as law that no man may so ditch or drain his premises that surface water shall be discharged therefrom in any other manner or at any other place or in any other [728]*728quantities than would characterize its flow were the land left in a state of nature would be to effectively block the progress of agricultural improvement over a very large part of the state.

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.W. 903, 151 Iowa 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obe-v-pattat-iowa-1911.