Taylor v. Fickas

64 Ind. 167
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 64 Ind. 167 (Taylor v. Fickas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Fickas, 64 Ind. 167 (Ind. 1878).

Opinion

Biddle, J.

The appellant entitled this case, “ Samuel C. Taylor, administrator of the estate of Martha E. Taylor, deceased,” etc., and filed the following complaint :

“ Samuel C. Taylor, administrator, aforesaid, complains of John H. Fickas, and says, that on the 11th day of December, 1866, the said Martha E. Taylor, whose name was then Martha E. James, became the owner in fee-simple, and entered into possession, of the following described tract of land, viz.: forty-five and ninety-one one-hundreths acres, out of the middle of the north-east quarter of section No. eleven (11), in township No. seven (7) south, range No. ten (10) west, being that part of said quarter section set off and allotted to Mrs. Emily R. James, as widow of Nathaniel J. James, in a suit for partition- in the court of common pleas of said county, during the November term, [169]*1691859, as appears by the report of commissioners in said suit, and the plat filed with the said report, all of which is recorded in partition record No. 1, on page No. 108, to which the plaintiff refers for a more perfect description of said land, situated in said county; and that the said Martha E. continued to own and possess the said land, until the 7th day of December, 1874, when she departed this life intestate, leaving the said plaintiff' her husband and sole heir of her said estate, and afterwards, to wit, on the 11th day of April, 1877, the plaintiff' was in due form appointed administrator of the estate of the said decedent.

“ The plaintiff further avers, that, during the year 1862, the defendant became the owner and entered into possession of the following described tract of land, viz.: Fifty-nine acres off of the west side of the said north-east quarter of said section eleven (11), lying west of and adjoining the said land of decedent; that said tracts of land lie in strips, each half a mile in length, running north and south, and are situated near the Ohio river, in said county, and are a part of the overflowed bottom lands near and adjacent to said river, and that, from time immemorial, a large extent of country in the vicinity of said tracts of land, and including the same, has been and still is liable to be .overflowed with water from the said river, after and during excessive rains in the valley of the said river; that, during said times of high-water and overflow, the water from the said river runs over the said tracts of land with a strong and rapid current, the general current of the same running from east to west, first over the land of decedent, and then over that of the defendant; the water in said current over said land varying in depth from two feet to ten feet, and that the water (which is in fact a portion of the said river) run in that manner duriug seasons of high-water and during times of overflow, from time immemorial, and that the same would have continued so [170]*170fco run but for the wrongful acts of the defendant hereinafter described.

“ The plaintiff further avers, that, during all the times of high-water and overflow of said river, great quantities of drift-wood have floated in the said.current, over the said tracts of iand, without injury to the same, and would have continued so to float but for the wrongful acts of the defendant hereinafter described.

“ The said tracts of land during the years hereinafter named were cleared and in cultivation, and of great value, to wit, of the value of one hundred dollars per acre; that the defendant, to protect his said tract of land from drift-wood, in the year 1864, wrongfully and unlawfully planted, and has since continued and maintained, a row of trees on his said land, on or near and within a few inches of the line dividing said tracts of land, in a continuous row or line, running north and south for a distance of half á mile, the said trees being planted only two feét apart, along the whole length of the line dividing said tracts of land.

“ That, a,t the time when the decedent purchased and entered, into the possession of the tract of land first above described, the said trees were of small size, having recently been planted, and were not of sufficient size to form the obstruction of said current, as hereinafter described; that during eight years, to wit, from the year 1867 to the year 1874, both included, the said trees, so wi’ougfully and unlawfully planted and maintained by the defendant, having grown to a sufficient size and strength, prevented the drift-wood floating in the said current during times of high-water and overflow in said river from flowing over and away from the land of decedent and from the land of the defendant. And during all those years the drift-wood which would have floated over and away from said decedent’s land, and from the defendant’s land,.lodged upon [171]*171and against the said trees, and upon said decedent’s land, in large quantities, so that a dam has been and was formed against said trees, and upon decedent’s lands, by-means whereof a large area of said land, to wit, five acres, became covered with trees, logs, stumps, brush and trash, which floated and lodged there during said years in times of high-water and overflow, and covered the said -five acres with said drift-wood and trash, to the depth of from two feet to ten feet, and which so remained covered at the time of the decease of the said Martha E., by reason whereof the said land became and was worthless and of no value.

“And the plaintiff further avers, that, by the obstruction aforesaid, the water was prevented from flowing off of said land of decedent, and remained stagnant, and the decaying wood and trash, so piled upon the said land by the means aforesaid, rendered the same unhealthy and unfit for a'human habitation.

“ By means whereof the plaintiff avers, that the said decedent sustained damages to the amount of two thousand dollars, for which he demands judgment, and for all other proper relief.”

The appellee filed a demurrer to the complaint, for that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The demurrer was sustained, the parties stood by their pleadings, and the court rendered final judgment for the appellee.

If this complaint was brought solely in the right of an administrator, the action would not lie. An administrator can not sue for an injury to the freehold. Emerson v. Emerson, 1 Vent. 187; Toller Executors, 159; Hill v. Penny, 17 Maine, 409. By the common law, lands went to the heir, not to the administrator. 2 Bl. Com. 201. In the State of Indiana, the administrator has no right in the [172]*172lands that descended to the heir, except upon the contingency that the personal estate is insufficient to pay the debts against the deceased, or in the absence of heirs or devisees. 2 R. S. 1876, pp. 519, 535, secs. 75, 110. And this is the general American doctrine. The appellant can not maintain the case as an administrator; hut, in the body of the complaint he avers that he is the sole heir of the decedent, and that the lands alleged to have been injured have descended to him. As an heir, he may bring the action.

The property in water that passes along and through a watercourse which has a bed, channel and banks, where it usually flows, is a mere usufruct interest, continuing only while the water is passing over the lands of the owner. He has the right to' receive it where the watercourse, in its natural channel, enters his land, and to use it while it is passing over his lands; but he is required to return it to its chaiinel when it leaves his land.

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64 Ind. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-fickas-ind-1878.