Stuefer v. West Point Milling Co.

128 N.W. 508, 87 Neb. 773, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 305
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1910
DocketNo. 16,100
StatusPublished

This text of 128 N.W. 508 (Stuefer v. West Point Milling Co.) 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
Stuefer v. West Point Milling Co., 128 N.W. 508, 87 Neb. 773, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 305 (Neb. 1910).

Opinions

Letton, J.

The purpose of this action is to enjoin the maintenance of a milldam and embankments in the Elkhorn river, to restrain the defendant from diverting the waters of the river, and from maintaining or increasing in height the dam, dikes, and embankments so as to allow the waters to overflow plaintiffs’ lands.

The allegations of the petition, much abridged, are as follows: That the several plaintiffs are the owners of separate tracts of land in Cuming county, Nebraska, adjacent to and drained by the Elkhorn river; that the natural fall of the stream as it passes through the land and for several miles up and down the stream is very slight; that the subsoil is wholly sand, so that when the flow of the water in the river is obstructed it percolates into the [774]*774plaintiffs’ lands to such an extent that the lands become sour and wholly unfit for use; that about the year 1875 a dam five feet in height was constructed across the river without authority of law or without the plaintiffs’ consent, but that, as so constructed, it did not damage the plaintiffs’ lands; that during the last five years the defendant and its predecessor has carelessly and negligently allowed the bed of the river above the dam to fill with silt and refuse so that the bed of the river has been raised a number of feet, and has raised the dam and filled in the river at that point until the dam is eight feet higher than originally built; that, in addition to raising the height of the dam, the defendant has caused embankments and dikes to be constructed along the banks of the river to the height of three feet extending to a long distance above the dam; that by these acts the waters in the river were obstructed and interfered with so as to overflow and submerge these lands and render them valueless for cultivation and pasture; that defendant threatens to build the dam and embankments higher; that the waters flow over the low lands to another outlet below the dam, and the river is forming and will form a new channel over plaintiffs’ lands; that the overflow has destroyed growing trees, grass, vegetation and crops, and that there is no adequate remedy at law.

The defendant pleads that the dam has been maintained at the same point ever since the year 1870 at the same height and in the same condition as now for the purpose of furnishing power with which to run a flouring mill, and since 1886 to pump water for the city of West Point; that the lands which are now overflowed have been continuously overflowed since 1870; that in 1904 the dam was washed out and soon afterwards reconstructed at a cost to defendant of between $5,000 and $7,000; that the plaintiffs knew that the dam would be useless and worthless unless it could be reconstructed and maintained at its present' height, but, notwithstanding such knowledge, they permitted and 'encouraged defendant to expend a [775]*775large sum of money in such reconstruction without objection or protest. It further denies all the facts in the petition not admitted in the answer. The reply is a general denial.

A large amount of testimony was taken and the cause submitted to the district court, which found that the mill-dam had not been built higher during the past five years, or at any time, so as to cause the lands to be overflowed to a greater extent than they have been for more than ten years next before the commencement of the action; found, further, that the lands have been overflowed to a greater extent in the past five years than prior thereto; found generally for the defendant and rendered judgment accordingly. From this judgment the plaintiffs appealed, and the case is now here for trial de novo upon the evidence produced before the district court.

It appears that in 1867 a special act of the legislature of the territory of Nebraska was passed (laws 1867, p. 99) authorizing certain persons to erect a milldam “across the Elkhorn river, in the northeast quarter of section twenty-seven, township number twenty-two, north of range number six east of the sixth principal meridian, in Cuming county, Nebraska Territory.” No dam was ever built .at that point, but in 1870 a floflr mill and dam were erected in another portion of section 27, the dam being the one complained of. There is no evidence to indicate (hat ad quod damnum proceedings were ev,er had, or that any damages were ever ascertained or paid to the owners of the land affected by the construction of the dam, so that whatever right the defendant may have to overflow the lands belonging to the plaintiffs has been acquired by adverse user since 1870, and not by express grant or condemnation. The appellants complain that the findings of fact made by the court are contrary to the law and the facts, and they insist that the great weight of the evidence sustains the allegations of the petition and entitle appellants to the decree prayed. This raises a very simple question, but one which requires a consideration of all the testimony in the record.

[776]*776The defendant insists at the outset that the plaintiffs have a complete and adequate remedy at law, and therefore are not entitled in any event to the relief prayed for. In tiie view we take of the evidence, it is unnecessary to consider this point, hut, if the allegations of the petition had been established, we doubt that adequate relief could have been afforded except by the interposition of a court of equity.

Before proceeding to a consideration of the evidence, it is well to premise that, in order to be entitled to relief in this case, it was' incumbent upon the plaintiffs to prove, not only that their lands had been overflowed, but that the flooding of the property was had and caused by the raising of the height of the dam or embankments to a height greater than the defendant’s rights by prescription warranted.

The first witness called for the plaintiffs was Mr. Heller, the county surveyor. He identified the situation of the plaintiffs’ lands with reference to the river and dam, and produced certain maps and profiles, which were introduced in evidence, showing the meanderings of the river, the level of the water for several miles above and below the dam, and the height of the dam. He testifies that at the time he made the measurements in 1906 it was 9.68 inches from -the surface of the water immediately above the dam to the surface of the still water immediately below. On cross-examination he testified that the elevation of the water in the mill-race and the elevation of the water above the dam was practically the same; that tiie levels were taken when the wheels were still, probably 25 feet back of where the water dips doAvn to go over the dam; that on February 8, 1908, he made another measurement, and this measurement makes the dam 6 or 8 inches lower than the other; that the quantity of water going over the dam varies, and that if the river rose 2 or 3 inches it would affect the measurement. The witness further testified that, at the time he measured, the Avater above the dam at a low place ran into and through [777]*777Wisner lake into the river again below the dam, and that it is now flowing there, and has been doing so for a number of years; that the embankment at the low place is broken, and that this low place was formerly the bed of the river.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.W. 508, 87 Neb. 773, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuefer-v-west-point-milling-co-neb-1910.