Rieck v. Schamanski

134 N.W. 228, 117 Minn. 25, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 26, 1912
DocketNos. 17,416—(175)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 134 N.W. 228 (Rieck v. Schamanski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rieck v. Schamanski, 134 N.W. 228, 117 Minn. 25, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 708 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Start, C. J.

Appeal from an order^of the district court of the county of Steele denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial. The complaint alleged in substance that the plaintiff and defendant were adjoining landowners; that the defendant unnecessarily and unreasonably dug a ditch through and upon his own land, which changed the natural course of the surface water on his own land, and caused it to flow upon the land of the plaintiff, thereby causing unnecessary and unreasonable damages. Judgment was asked for the amount of the damages sustained and for a perpetual injunction restraining the defendant from so discharging such waters upon plaintiff’s land.

The answer of the defendant admitted the construction of the ditch on his own land, denied that it was unnecessarily or unreasonably done, and alleged that there was no other available method of draining the surface water from his own land.

The cause was tried by the court without .a jury, and findings of fact and conclusions of law madé, which, as amended, are, briefly stated, these:

The plaintiff owns and occupies a farm of eighty acres of land [27]*27adjoining on tbe west a farm of one hundred twenty acres owned and occupied by the defendant. Adjoining this last tract on the east, the plaintiff also owns a tract of eighty acres of land.

Commencing one hundred feet east of the line of defendant’s farm, there is a ravine with high banks running in a general southwesterly direction through the north forty of plaintiff’s farm, carrying the water that accumulates in a small watershed to the south forty thereof, where it spreads out into a small marsh of about six acres, thence across the highway on the west line of plaintiff’s farm, and discharges on the land of one Olson into a so-called town ditch leading to the Le Sueur river. The fall from plaintiff’s farm across the highway into the town ditch by way of Olson’s land is very slight. The water flowing across plaintiff’s farm through the ravine stands upon the slough on his south forty until the same either evaporates or slowly works its way across the highway into a ditch on Olson’s land.

On defendant’s farm there is a marsh of about twenty acres, which before the construction of the drain here in question was at all times covered with water, and had no natural outlet for the waters so accumulating thereon, except in times of high water, when the same flowed in a northeasterly direction and away from plaintiff’s farm. This slough on defendant’s farm was separated from the watershed •on plaintiff’s farm by a stretch of high, dry land, wholly on defendant’s tract, one hundred fifty feet wide, which has at all times •offered a natural and complete barrier and protection to the plaintiff’s land from the waters accumulating in the slough on defendant’s farm.

The defendant constructed a ten-inch tile drain through the high land separating his slough and the head of the watershed leading into and across plaintiff’s land, one hundred fifty-two feet long and ■seven feet and ten inches deep at the highest point, and connected ■the drain with his slough by an open ditch, and thereby caused the waters of such slough to be discharged through the tile drain upon plaintiff’s land, and to run down and cover his marsh and stand thereon, and thereby greatly injure plaintiff’s pasture land, and [28]*28render the same to a large extént incapable of use, and that by so doing he converted his own slough into ordinary pasture land.

The damages resulting to plaintiff’s land up to the time of the commencement of this action amount to the sum of $50. The defendant threatens and intends to keep such drain open.

Prior to the construction of defendant’s ditch, the water in his slough, when the same overflowed at times of heavy rains, found an outlet in a general northeasterly direction through a natural depression over and across the northwesterly corner of an eighty-acre tract, adjoining defendant’s farm on the east, and owned by the plaintiff, and thence through a series of large, grassy sloughs, over the lands of one Hugh Murray and of other parties, to Cannon river. There was not, at any point between defendant’s slough and Cannon river, any well-defined channel, with banks; hence to fully drain the water therefrom, and that accumulating along such natural depression, it would be necessary to construct a ditch beyond the land of Hugh Murray.

There is no evidence in the case from which the dimensions of such ditch could be in any manner determined. To drain defendant’s slough in such northeasterly direction as far as the marsh on the lands of Hugh Murray, it would be necessary to open a ditch across a portion of plaintiff’s east eighty, less than two feet deep at the highest point and not more than four hundred feet long. If such ditch were so constructed, it would be practicable to drain defendant’s slough in the direction and through the channel which the overflow had always followed prior to the construction of defendant’s ditch.

The court found as conclusions of law: “That the defendant was not entitled to relieve his own land from the surface water naturally accumulating thereon, by causing the same to flow upon and damage the land of the plaintiff, or to turn such waters out of their natural course across the divide separating plaintiff’s land from defendant’s, even though the ditch for doing the same was entirely [29]*29upon his own land and the damage resulting to plaintiff less than the benefit which would accrue to himself.”

Judgment was accordingly directed for the plaintiff, enjoining the defendant from maintaining the ditch, and for $50 damages.

Thereupon the defendant made a motion to have the findings of fact amended in several particulars relative to the question whether the defendant by his tile drain ditch unnecessarily and unreasonably caused the surface waters from his own farm to flow upon that of the plaintiff to his damage. The motion as to such requested findings was denied. Thereupon the defendant made a motion for a new trial.

The defendant’s assignments of error are not sufficient to raise all of the questions discussed in the brief, but they are sufficient to raise the questions whether the trial court erred in finding that it would be practicable to drain the defendant’s farm by a ditch northeasterly through the land of the plaintiff and that of Hugh Murray, whether the court erred in not finding that the construction by defendant of the tile drain ditch was a reasonable use and improvement of his farm, and that it does not and will not unreasonably affect the plaintiff’s land, and also whether the facts found sustain the conclusions of law.

The principal question presented for our decision is the last one. The others are important only in connection with a consideration of the facts found. In analyzing the findings of fact, and in considering the question whether they justify the conclusions of law, it is essential to keep in mind the issue made by the pleadings, namely: Whether the defendant unnecessarily and unreasonably, by the tile drain ditch upon his own land, changed the natural course of the surface water on his own land, and thereby caused it to flow upon plaintiff’s farm, causing him unnecessary and unreasonable damages. This was the issue tendered by the complaint, from which it appears that the waters in question are surface waters proper.

According to the findings of fact, there is no natural outlet to this surface water to the northeast over the plaintiff’s land, except for

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 N.W. 228, 117 Minn. 25, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rieck-v-schamanski-minn-1912.