Stacy v. Delery

122 S.W. 300, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 300 (Stacy v. Delery) 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
Stacy v. Delery, 122 S.W. 300, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 55 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by William Stacy in the District Court to enjoin W. S. Delery and Jane Frisbie *244 from cutting certain dams erected by Stacy on White’s Bayou. Both defendants answered. Delery also pleaded in reconvention for damages against plaintiff Stacy, occasioned by injury to his rice crop caused.by unlawful detention and appropriation by plaintiff of water flowing in White’s Bayou. After answer by defendants, plaintiff dismissed his suit for injunction with the allegation that such remedy was no longer necessary, and the cause as between Stacy and Delery proceeded to trial upon Delery’s plea in reconvention. Upon trial without a jury judgment was rendered’for Delery for $826.25, from which Stacy appeals.

By the first, second, fifth and tenth assignments of error appellant complains of the judgment as based upon a cause of action not embraced in the pleadings but variant therefrom. The plea in intervention sets out that appellee had rented a tract of land for the year 1907, upon which he had planted and was growing a crop of rice. The land lay along White’s Bayou, a running stream from which appellee procured water to water the crop, catching and holding the water in a dam across the bayou, and pumping it out on his rice. That appellant, who was a rice grower on land above him, had placed a dam in White’s Bayou and had thereby stopped the flow of the stream, appropriated all of 'the water and prevented any of it from reaching appellee at a time when he was in pressing need of the same to water his rice crop, for the lack of which water his rice crop was injured.

It is further alleged in the pleadings, “That the stream known as White’s Bayou has its head at a point north or northwest from the town of Devers, on the north side of the Texas & Hew Orleans Bail-way track, and runs thence in a eastwardly direction through the Whittington league, owned by William Babcock, and turning south across said railway at a point east of the town of Devers, and enters the Benjamin Barrow survey of land, and continuing thence in a southwardly direction, passing through said land leased by the defendant, W. S. Delery, hereinabove described. That in recent years a gully has been washed out by the flow of water caused by rainfall, which gully beginning on said ‘ White’s Bayou and the Benjamin Barrow survey of land, extending thence northwestwardly through said Barrow’s survey, a part of the Chism survey, and on west of the town of Devers, the head of said gully being near to said White’s Bayou, northwest of said town of Devers; that this said gully is not now and has never been the main stream or waterway of White’s Bayou, but that same has only in recent years come into existence as a stream, and that by reason of natural rainfall and overflow of water from said White’s Bayou northwest of the town of Devers, which rainfall and overflow water following a natural depression west of said town of Devers, has flowed southwardly into the said White’s Bayou again, and by reason of washing caused by said rainfall and said overflow of water from said White’s Bayou the said gully has been made. That one tract of plaintiff’s -land borders on said White’s Bayou, and said tract of land so bordering upon said White’s Bayou is shown on the map, which the defendant hereto attached, and same *245 is marked for identification; that the other two tracts of land owned by plaintiff "are on the said gully, which is located west of the town of Devers, as hereinabove described and referred to; that the said two tracts of said land are not riparian to the said White’s Bayou, and the same do not touch or come in contact with the said White’s Bayou in its natural channel or proper basin. This defendant is informed and believes, and upon such information and belief avers, that said plaintiff’s crop of rice referred to and described in his petition was grown upon said tracts, which are not riparian to the said White’s Bayou. This defendant says, therefore, that the plaintiff did appropriate the water from White’s Bayou to irrigate said tracts of land which are not entitled to irrigation from, it; that the supply of water from White’s Bayou is wholly inadequate to irrigate the lands owned by plaintiff, which are not riparian to said White’s Bayou, and the land leased by defendant Delery and upon which the said Delery was growing a crop of rice last year.”

A plat attached to the plea in reconvention and introduced in evidence shows the stream, the course of which has been shown, marked “White’s Bayou,” and the other stream marked “White’s Bayou Gully,” the upper end of which is shown to be connected with White’s Bayou by a ditch, and which runs thence in about a straight line to connect with White’s Bayou below the lands marked as Stacy’s lands, and above the lands of Delery. The map also shows Stacy’s cultivated land lying along its stream marked White’s Bayou Gully, other lands intervening between them and White’s Bayou. The sketch also shows a dam on White’s Bayou, just above the junction of the two streams, and another further up the stream marked White’s Bayou Gully.

It is further alleged “that the said tract of land which is located upon and which is riparian to the said White’s Bayou is south of and along the course of said White’s Bayou, below the other tracts of land owned by plaintiff; that said tract of land riparian to said bayou is woodland, not adapted for the cultivation and growth of rice, and that no part of same is now in cultivation for the purpose of growing rice, and that none of the water from said White’s Bayou was used upon said land for the purpose of irrigating crops growing on same; that, said plaintiff has constructed a dam across said bayou, and by means of said dam stops the water which should naturally drain past the land of the defendant Delery, and confines same by said dam on the said tract of land owned by plaintiff, and within the banks of said White’s Bayou, and then pumps same from said dam back upon the lands owned by plaintiff, which are not riparian to White’s Bayou; that said dam practically consumes all of the water flowing through said White’s Bayou, and plaintiff is now appropriating and seeking to appropriate all of said water, and confines same by said dam, thereby preventing it passing beyond same to the land being cultivated by said Delery; that it is not necessary for the cultivation and growth of crops of rice upon said plaintiff’s premises to appropriate all of said water, but that the said plaintiff is storing said water on his said land, instead of permitting the same to take its natural course, *246 which would permit it to reach the land leased and cultivated by said defendant Delery.”

It is made clearly to appear from the allegations of the plea that appellee intends to distinguish carefully White’s Bayou from the other stream which he calls a gully, and which is marked on his sketch as White’s Bayou Gully, and the gravamen of his complaint is that by means of a dam across White’s Bayou, which is shown on the sketch, appellant has impounded the water coming down White’s Bayou, thus depriving appellee of the use thereof to water his lands lower down on the stream and using the same to water his (appellant’s) rice on land alleged to be not riparian to White’s Bayou, but lying along said gully.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 300, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacy-v-delery-texapp-1909.