Stewart v. Schneider

22 Neb. 286
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 22 Neb. 286 (Stewart v. Schneider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Schneider, 22 Neb. 286 (Neb. 1887).

Opinion

Maxwell, Ch. J.

The plaintiff alleges in his petition, “that the said plaintiff was the owner of and in the actual occupation and possession of the north-east quarter of section nineteen, town four N., range fourteen east, Nemaha county, Nebraska, from about the first day of January, 1880, until about the first day of June, 1885; that the defendant was, and yet is, the owner of and in the actual occupation and possession of the east half of the southwest quarter, and the west half of the south-east quarter of section nineteen, town four N., range fourteen east, Nemaha county, Nebraska; that in the summer of 1882, the said defendant proceeded to and was building and constructing a ditch and embankment along the north line of his premises herein described in such a manner as to turn all the water arising, from ‘ Spring Branch ’ away from, its natural course and direction, which was over and across the defendant’s premises, and precipitated said waters in and upon the premises of the plaintiff herein mentioned, to the great damage and injury of the plaintiff; that the district court of Nemaha county, Nebraska, did, [289]*289on the 2d day of September, a.d. 1882, grant and allow a temporary order of injunction, by which said order of injunction the defendant was restrained from further pursuing the building and completing of the said ditch and said embankment until such time as a final hearing on the petition praying said order of injunction might be had; that by the mutual agreement of the plaintiff and defendant in this action, they being plaintiff and defendant in the injunction proceeding begun in September, 1882, in this court, as well as by the judgment and consideration of the district court of this county at the March term thereof, A.D. 1883, the said temporary order of injunction was made final, perpetual, and mandatory, and said defendant was enjoined and restrained from further making of any ditch and embankment, such as was described in the petition in that cause, and the said defendant agreed to and was required by the said order to make three clear, clean openings in the said embankment, which was then erected and completed, each of said openings to be at least one rod wide, and said openings located as follows: one opposite and just south of the south-west corner of the plaintiff’s said land mentioned in the petition in that cause, which is the same land above mentioned as having been owned by plaintiff; and one such opening to be ten rods west of the said south-west corner of said plaintiff’s land, and the third said opening to be forty rods east of the said south-west corner of Said plaintiff’s land, and said defendant was to have the right to build ditches on his own land in the said locality, of sufficient dimensions to gather and back water towards the ‘Muddy’ creek, said ditches to be free from embankments, and the said three openings and ditches were ordered to be made and completed within thirty days from the date of said order and stipulation; that the said order and stipulation was dated the twentieth day of March, a.d. 1883; that the defendant wholly disregarded and in each and every par[290]*290ticular disobeyed and violated the said stipulation aud order of injunction so made perpetual by the judgment and consideration of the district court of Nemaha county, by failing, neglecting, and refusing to make the said three openings at the time required by the said order of injunction, and by continuing and completing the said ditches with embankments; that information, charging the defendant with the violation of the said injunction, having been filed in the district court of said county, the said defendant was by the judgment and consideration of the said district court at the April term thereof, A.D. 1885, upon a full hearing of all the allegations and proofs, the defendant being in court in person and by counsel, adjudged guilty of contempt of court for his violation of the said order of injunction, and was required to enter into further security for his faithful observance of the injunction; that in consequence of the failure of the defendant to obey the said injunction, and by his failure and refusal to make said three openings in said embankment at the time specified in the said order of injunction, and in consequence of his building and completing the said ditches with embankments contrary to the said order of injunction, the west eighty acres of the plaintiff’s land, mentioned in this petition, was overflowed and a large body of water was backed onto the said eighty acres and there remained for about the space of fifteeen days, which said wrongs and injuries occurred in the month of June, 1884, and thereby and in consequence of the said overflow fifty acres of growing corn of the said west eighty acres were wholly ruined and destroyed, and plaintiff’s premises were greatly injured and damaged; that by reason of and in consequence of the said overflow complained of above, plaintiff suffered the loss and total destruction of twelve tons of good and merchantable hay stacked on the said premises.

“ Plaintiff has suffered damages in the sum of one thousand dollars, no part of which has ever been paid; plaintiff therefore prays judgment against the defendant for the [291]*291sum of one thousand dollars, together with costs of suit ■and for such other and further relief as justice and equity-may require.”

The answer is a general denial.

On the trial of the cause to a jury the following stipulation was introduced in evidence: “ The said parties stipulate and agree that injunction as prayed against defendant’s making any embankment such as is described in the petition be made perpetual, with a mandatory order that •defendant shall make three clear and clean openings in the said embankment which he has already erected in the premises, each of said openings to be one rod wide, and shall be located as follows: one opposite and just south of the south-west corner of plaintiff’s land, described in the petition, and one such opening shall be ten rods west of said south-west corner of plaintiff’s said premises, and the third said opening shall be forty rods east of said southwest corner of plaintiff’s said premises.

“ And defendant shall have the right to make ditches on his own land, free and clear of embankments, [that will gather and back water] towards the Muddy to the extent of his line, and plaintiff will furnish right of way from defendant’s line to extend such ditch to the Muddy free of charge. The ditch from defendant’s east line eastward to the Muddy shall be made by the defendant to correspond in size and depth with the ditch west of there.

“ The said three openings in embankment and said ditch shall all be made by defendant within one month from this date. Plaintiff shall pay the defendant ten dollars, and defendant shall pay all costs herein.

“ Judgment, decree, and order shall be entered according to this agreement.

“March 20th, 1883.

“Eudoldh: Schneider,

“By J. H. Broady, Att’y.

“E. A. Stewart,

“By B. O. Wilkinson, Agt. and Att’y.”

[292]*292It appears that a decree was entered in that casein conformity to the above stipulation. ■ The testimony covers i!14 pages, and the substance of it is contained in that of the witnesses, Carnes and Stewart. A. Carnes, a witness called by the plaintiff below, testified in substance as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Neb. 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-schneider-neb-1887.