Sullivan v. Hoffman

296 N.W.2d 707, 207 Neb. 166, 1980 Neb. LEXIS 944
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1980
Docket42804
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 296 N.W.2d 707 (Sullivan v. Hoffman) 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
Sullivan v. Hoffman, 296 N.W.2d 707, 207 Neb. 166, 1980 Neb. LEXIS 944 (Neb. 1980).

Opinion

Buckley, District Judge.

This is an action between adjoining farmland owners in Hall County, Nebraska, wherein the plaintiffs, John P. Sullivan and Milrae Sullivan, seek to enjoin the defendant, Arthur C. Hoffman, from maintaining a *168 dike near the boundary of their adjoining property, which dike plaintiffs claim prevents the natural flow of water from running off plaintiffs’ property and into a lagoon or pond on defendant’s property.

The defendant cross-petitioned, contending that the plaintiffs, by leveling and diking their land, have diverted the natural flow of water from a basin on their own land onto defendant’s land, and seeking an injunction against plaintiffs from any such further diversion. After trial, which included an inspection of the property by the trial judge, the District Court for Hall County, Nebraska, dismissed both plaintiffs’ petition and defendant’s cross-petition. Plaintiffs’ motion for new trial was overruled, from which they appeal. Defendant did not file a motion for new trial and has not cross-appealed.

Since 1970, plaintiffs owned an 80-acre tract, described as the east half of the southeast quarter of Section 16, Township 9 North, Range 9 West of the 6th P.M. On March 1, 1978, 9 days before their petition was filed, plaintiffs purchased the northeast quarter of the same section, which they had previously leased and farmed for about 5 years. The 80-acre tract purchased in 1970 is referred to as Tract 1 and is bordered on the north by the 160-acre tract purchased in 1978, which is referred to as Tract 2.

The defendant owns 280 acres described as all of the north half of Section 15, Township 9 North, Range 9 West of the 6th P.M., except the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 15. Those 40 acres, known as the Beukenhorst Tract, lie at the northwest corner of the defendant’s land.

Section 15 lies directly east of Section 16. Thus, defendant’s land is east of and adjacent to plaintiffs’ Tract 2. The Beukenhorst Tract is also adjacent to plaintiffs’ Tract 2, at its north end. A county road, running north and south, separates the parties’ land as well as plaintiffs’ Tract 2 and the Beukenhorst Tract.

The county road contains two culverts. One is located *169 about 150 feet north of the north-south boundary of defendant’s land and the Beukenhorst Tract. It lies between plaintiffs’ Tract 2 and the Beukenhorst Tract, and has been there longer than any witness could recall. In fact, it is referred to by some, significantly as will be seen later, as the original culvert. The second culvert lies about a quarter mile south, or just to the north of the north-south boundary of plaintiffs’ Tracts 1 and 2, and the south boundary of defendant’s land. It thus lies between plaintiffs’ Tract 2 and the defendant’s tract. The record is silent as to when this south culvert was installed.

The terrain in the area is generally flat. It is all irrigated. There is, however, a sufficient change in elevation so that water generally flows from the south to the northeast corner of Tract 1, from the west to the east across Tract 2, and from the east to the west across defendant’s tract. There is generally a low area on both sides of the road around the south culvert.

The plaintiffs testified that the water from winter thaws and heavy rains flowed naturally to the area of the south culvert, then through the culvert and into a lagoon on defendant’s land, and that the defendant blocked this flow by erecting a dike along the west boundary of his land, very close to the road and the culvert. This, in turn, caused the flow of water to back up and flood a large area of plaintiffs’ land.

Plaintiffs rely upon Block v. Franzen, 163 Neb. 270, 79 N.W.2d 446 (1956), a case involving a similar situation. There, the parties owned adjoining farms, wherein a large, landlocked pond lay across the common boundary, partly on each piece of land. The defendants built a dike along their side of the common boundary so as to prevent water flowing into the pond on plaintiffs’ land from reaching the area of the pond on defendants’ land. Plaintiffs sought an injunction to compel removal of the dike. There, a material question of fact, as it is here, was whether the pond was a permanent lake. In that regard, we said, “In Lackaff v. *170 Bogue, 158 Neb. 174, 62 N. W. 2d 889, it was stated: ‘Surface waters comprehend waters from rains, springs, or melting snows which lie or flow on the surface of the earth but which do not form part of a watercourse or lake.’ ... ‘“Surface waters cease to be such when they empty into and become part of a natural stream or lake, but they do not lose their character as such by reason of their flowing from the land on which they first make their appearance onto lower land in obedience to the law of gravity, or by flowing into a hatural basin from which they normally disappear through evaporation or percolation, ***.”’” Block v. Franzen at 277-78, 79 N.W.2d at 450.

There, we affirmed the injunction granted by the trial court for the reason that “Here the waters in the pond clearly come within the classification of permanent waters in a lake. The rules as to the right to defend against surface waters do not apply.” Block v. Franzen at 278, 79 N.W.2d at 451. We went on to apply the rule that: “The owner of a lake wherein the surface water from the surrounding land accumulates, and from which it has no means of escape except by evaporation or percolation, cannot lawfully, by means of a ditch or dike, discharge such water upon the land of his neighbor without his consent, to his injury.” Block v. Franzen (syllabus of the court).

Therefore, we must first determine whether the lagoon or pond plaintiffs describe on defendant’s tract was such a body of water as to prevent defendant from diverting the natural accumulation of surface water into it.

The evidence varies considerably as to the amount of water that ponded on defendant’s land. The defendant testified that from the time he purchased the land in 1957, he farmed crops every year and in only one year, 1967, a particularly wet year, did he lose some crops to water. Plaintiff John Sullivan testified that the spring thaws and heavy rains created a pond of 50 to 60 acres in the area near the south culvert, and *171 that this was an annual occurrence. However, there is no direct testimony, or even the inference, that whatever water ponded on defendant’s tract remained there throughout the entire year. To the contrary, the evidence indicates that, at worst, the water stood only from spring until fall. Plaintiffs put in evidence two photographs of the area involved. One was taken in the fall of 1977, shortly after the defendant built the dike. There not only is no water, but the ground appears to be dry. The other picture was taken in the spring of 1978. It shows the last of the winter’s snow, and the ground is generally wet. It also shows water standing in the ditch alongside the county road and between the road and the dike, but this water does not extend to the dike. Defendant introduced a picture of the property taken in May 1978, some time after plaintiffs’ picture.

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.W.2d 707, 207 Neb. 166, 1980 Neb. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-hoffman-neb-1980.