Stewart v. City of Springfield

165 S.W.2d 626, 350 Mo. 234, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 8, 1942
DocketNos. 37234, 37242.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 626 (Stewart v. City of Springfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. City of Springfield, 165 S.W.2d 626, 350 Mo. 234, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 572 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

*243 DOUGLAS, J.

— Plaintiffs aré riparian owners of land on Wilson Creek, near Springfield, Missouri. They filed separate actions for damages to their respective lands arising from the pollution of the creek caused by the discharge of the effluent of the Springfield *244 sewer system into the creek. Stewart and wife sued for $10,000.00, and Chappell and wife for $25,000.00.

Demurrers to both petitions, which are substantially the same, were sustained and appeals taken to this court. Here the cases were consolidated by agreement of the parties. They are companion cases to Riggs v. City of Springfield, 344 Mo. 420, 126 S. W. (2d) 1144, decided by this court in 1939. Since we have reached the conclusion that both are governed by the decision in that case, our discussion will be limited to the Stewart appeal.

The petition is lengthy. It covers more than forty printed pages. It shows that Springfield, then a city of the third class, under an ordinance enacted in 18.92, constructed a sewer system which discharged the city’s sewage into the creek. In the beginning the sewage was not of sufficient quantity to pollute the waters of the creek where they flowed by appellants’ land, but as the city grew in size and the sewage increased the pollution extended to appellants’ land.

In 1911 appellants and other riparian owners filed suits against the city for damages. The petitions in these suits were in two counts. One was for temporary damages accruing between 1906 and 1911 on the theory that the city had created an abatable nuisance. The other count was for the permanent injury to appellants’ land on the ground the city had appropriated the use of the creek because the sewer system was permanent, and was intended to discharge sewage into the creek throughout all time causing a permanent depreciation in the value of their land. These cases were settled. The city paid $4,700.00 on the claims for temporary damages and the claims for permanent damages were dismissed without prejudice. In the settlement the landowners agreed not to bring future suits for temporary damages until the city had an opportunity to install septic tanks, but expressly reserved their rights to bring such suits “they may deem they have against the City of Springfield for the permanent injury and depreciation to their real estate should said nuisance not be abated, and this agreement shall in nowise prejudice or affect their said cause of action, and shall in nowise prejudice or affect any defense that the city may have thereto.”

The sum of $100,000.00 was voted by the city and the septic tanks were built and put into operation.

In 1925 appellants and others again brought suits alleging the same claims for temporary and permanent damages. Settlement was made on the same basis as before, this..time for an aggregate payment of $17,500.00.

The sum of $325,000.00 was voted and sewage disposal plants were built.-

Then in 1932 appellants and others once more-filed similar suits, this time settled for $25,000.00.

*245 In 1935 and 1936 the instant suits were filed. Appellants again are claiming temporary damages for the preceding five years on the theory the city is maintaining an abatable nuisance.

The chief question before us is whether appellants may recover on their present claim for temporary damages, or are they precluded because the city has long since appropriated the use of the creek under its right of eminent domain and the statute of limitations has run against every claim appellants might have.

There can be no question about due process if the city has permanently appropriated the use of the creek under its right of eminent domain. Yearsley v. W. A. Ross Constr. Co., 309 U. S. 18.

In the Riggs case we held the city had done so under its right of eminent domain so that Riggs’ entire damage had to be assessed in one action, and the statute of limitations commenced to run from the time the injury to Riggs’ land became apparent. We followed the case of Smith v. Sedalia, 244 Mo. 107, 147 S. W. 597. We quoted with approval from that case as follows: “These authorities compel us to say that the nuisance in question is permanent, and that plaintiff, if injured thereby, had a cause of action for his damages past and future, all of which were comprehended in and were to be measured by the depreciation in the market value of the land caused by the presence of the sewer.” If the ruling in the Riggs case is applicable here the judgment of the trial court sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition must be affirmed.

Aside from the parties and the lands it is conceded that the petition in the present case is the same as the one in the Riggs case, except for the paragraphs alleging the three previous suits. By the stipulations for settlement and judgments on the stipulations in these suits, appellants claim the city is bound to the theory that its use of .the creek is a temporary nuisance which the city could abate, and until abated the city must again respond with damages as it did on the three previous occasions. In other'words, they assert the city by its course of action in the three previous suits is'now prevented from claiming in this case its permanent appropriation of the use of the creek and asserting the .defense of limitations. We do not find that the city is so bound.

As to the first and second suits our finding needs no discussion. In the settlements of both suits the city expressly reserved the right to raise any defense it might have in any future action. In the second ease the city 'even pleaded the statute of limitations in its answer. In both cases appellants recognized that the city might have permanently appropriated the use "of the creek by asserting a claim for permanent damages.

Turning to the allegations about the third suit we find practically the same facts in the settlement, except there was no express reservation as there was in the two previous settlements that the city could *246 assert any defense it might have in any future suit. The petition again claimed damages both for temporary and permanent injuries. The settlement was again made only for temporary injuries. The claim for permanent injuries was again dismissed. The settlement contained a provision that appellants could make claims in the future. It can’t be said that the absence of an express provision reserving to the city the right to defend itself against such claims will prevent it from doing so. Nor do we find the city is restricted in the nature of its defense.

In all the settlements the parties agreed that their effect should not be construed as a condemnation of appellants’ land or as giving the city any permanent or future rights to empty its sewage into the creek so as to pollute the water. It is plain this construction must have been made under a misapprehension as the city had years before appropriated the permanent use of the creek. There is no claim of any misrepresentation by the city. The record shows the landowners were not prevented in any way from asserting their claims for the permanent damage to their lands but that in each instance they did so.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 626, 350 Mo. 234, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-city-of-springfield-mo-1942.