Smith v. Beam

1936 OK 72, 55 P.2d 980, 176 Okla. 408, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1936
DocketNo. 23709.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1936 OK 72 (Smith v. Beam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Beam, 1936 OK 72, 55 P.2d 980, 176 Okla. 408, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 214 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

CORN, J.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court, the same as the order herein.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, Del E. Smith, against three coterminous landowners and two township boards for damages and to abate structures erected by the defendants in their individual and corporate capacities which diverted water and held water upon plaintiff’s land over that of natural conditions.

The case was tried to the court, and judgment was for the defendants.

The prayer of plaintiff’s petition for relief against the defendant Harry Beam was that he be restrained and enjoined from continuing and maintaining the earthen levee from the southwest corner of Beam’s farm in section .30 eastward along the south line of said quarter section, and that Beam be required to raze the said levee and restore the lay of the ground to its natural condition.

The substance of Beam’s first defense is that he constructed a small dam or dyke about four feet high at the westerly end, and about three feet high at the easterly end, extending from his southwest corner east 400 feet, and that paralleling this dam or dyke, and immediately by it on the south, he constructed a large ditch of sufficient capacity to carry off the surface and storm waters which come from the west on the north side of the public highway, between the Fleming farm and the Goode farm; that 400 feet east of his southwest corner there is a deep natural drain from six to ten feet deep, coining from the southwest across the northwest part of plaintiff’s farm, thence across the southwest part of Beam’s farm, emptying into Deer creek on Beam’s farm 800 or 900 feet from his southwest corner; that the ditch which Beam constructed on the southwest corner of his farm to the north side of the road, east approximately 400 feet, carried the storm and surface waters into said natural branch.

Beam denied that his said dam or dyke caused either the surface waters or storm waters to overflow any part of plaintiff’s farm more than the overflow on said farm prior to the erection of the said dyke, and further alleged that he had maintained said ditch in its present condition, and that said ditch had taken care of the surface and storm waters and emptied the same into the draw about 400 feet east of his southwest corner.

Beam’s second defense was that both his dyke or dam and his ditch immediately south thereof had been maintained by him in their present location and condition adversely and continuously for a period of over 30 years, and therefore, if the building of said dyke or dam and of said ditch caused the northwest part of plaintiff’s farm to be overflowed by storm waters more than said lands would have been overflowed had not said dyke and ditch been constructed, the defendant Beam, by the continuous maintenance of said dyke or dam and of said ditch for a period of over 15 years, continuously last past, and for a period of approximately 30 years last past, had acquired the right by prescription to continue to maintain said dyke or dam and said ditch, and that plaintiff is barred by the 15-year statute of limitations from maintaining said action against said defendant Beam to abate said dyke and dam, or for damages.

Plaintiff’s petition prayed for judgment against the defendant Harry Fleming restraining and enjoining him from maintaining the artificial ditch leading the waters from the north and west of his land into the highway between the lands of the defendant Fleming and the lands of the defendant Goode, and requiring him to restore said storm waters from the northwest to their natural flowage eastward and northeastward across Fleming’s land, and across the section line between the Fleming and Beam farms.

Fleming’s first defense was that his. remote grantor, one J. M. Koeppel, while the owner of said farm, cut said artificial ditch *410 from the northwest to the southeast, across part of said farm, leading the storm waters flowing down from the northwest, out of the natural flowway, and that said waters flow through said artificial ditch from a point about 700 feet north of the south line of said Fleming farm, southeasterly across the center of said farm to the roadway on the south side thereof, entering an artificial ditch on the south side of said roadway and, when reaching the north side of said roadway, are conducted to the east along the south side of the Fleming farm to the southeast corner of said farm, thence east through a culvert under the north and south road, and thence into an artificial ditch which was dug and maintained about the same time, and over 30 years ago, by the defendant Harry Beam, and through said ditch said waters flow into a deep natural drain about 440 feet east of the southeast corner of the Fleming farm. And said defendant, therefore, denied that the waters coming into the roadway between the Fleming and Goode farms from said artificial ditch caused any increased discharge and flow of the storm waters across the plaintiff’s farm.

Fleming’s second defense was that, if said artificial ditch across his farm does increase the discharge of storm waters «cross plaintiff’s farm, plaintiff, at this time, is barred by the 15-year statute of limitations from complaining of said increased flow of waters; that said artificial ditch on said Fleming farm and the drainage ditch on the north side of the roadway on the south side of the Fleming farm have been in their present condition, maintained by said Fleming and his immediate and remote grantors, in conjunction with the township board of Spring creek township and in conjunction with Harry Beam, openly, adversely, and continuously for a period of over 30 years last past, and the plaintiff therefore is barred by the statute of limitations from maintaining his action for damages or for injunction.

Plaintiff’s petition prayed for judgment against the defendant township trustees of Spring Creek township, prohibiting and enjoining them from maintaining the raised roadway between the Fleming and Goode farms, and requiring said board of trustees to raise the said roadway and restore the same to a state of nature, and requiring them to remove the artificial elevation of said roadway and to restore the same to the natural level of said land, or to compensate plaintiff for damage by increased burden of waters diverted by said roadway onto and across said land.

The first defense of the board of trustees of Spring Creek township alleged that they and their predecessors in office, on behalf of the Spring Creek township, had maintained an east and west highway between sections 25 and 33, Spring Creek township, and in maintaining said roadway had graded the same and had raised the center thereof in places slightly above the adjoining land; that on each side of said road there have been, at all times for more than 15 years last past, drainage ditches to carry the waters eastward and toward the common corner of the farms belonging to the plaintiff and to the defendants Harry Beam, Harry Fleming, and S. A.

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Related

Brewer v. Davidson
1945 OK 201 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1945)
Broadwell v. Flynn
1941 OK 204 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 72, 55 P.2d 980, 176 Okla. 408, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-beam-okla-1936.