Thomas v. Bunch

41 S.W.2d 359, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1349
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1931
DocketNo. 12470.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 359 (Thomas v. Bunch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Bunch, 41 S.W.2d 359, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1349 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This appeal for the second time involves a controversy between the appellee, A. H. Bunch, and Mrs. M. E. Thomas and her son Lewis, a history of which is to be found in our opinion on the former appeal. See Bunch v. Thomas et al., 290 S. W. 569.

Briefly stated, appellee, Bunch, as successor in title of one H. H. Hubbard, is the owner of some 318 acres of land situated in Parker county. Mrs. M. E. Thomas is the surviving wife, and Lewis Thomas is the surviving son, of Dave Thomas, deceased, and as such own a tract of land of which the cultivated part, consisting of some 100 acres or more, lies immediately south of the Bunch land. Between the Bunch land and the cultivated portion of the Thomas land is a public road about 40 feet wide, which extends east and west. The evidence tends to show that the land immediately affected is, for purposes of cultivation, practically level; but on the Bunch land there is a gradual decline from the north, east, and west toward about the center of the cultivated fields.

The evidence shows that about the ■ year 1905 H. H. Hubbard, the then owner of the Bunch land, instituted suit against Dave Thomas, the then owner of the land now owned by Mrs. Thomas and her son, to abate a small dam about 2 feet high and perhaps 100 or more feet long, erected by Thomas just inside of the north boundary line of the Thomas tract. The basis of the Hubbard suit was a claim that the dam interrupted the natural flow of storm waters and backed the same up on his tract to his damage. That suit resulted in a judgment in favor of Thomas, which has never been set aside.

The record discloses no further contests between the respective owners of the tracts of land mentioned until Bunch instituted this action against Mrs. Thomas and her son, alleging that he had purchased his tract in November, 1918, after which the Thomases had begun repairing and building higher and wider and making more substantial the original embankment and dike on the north line of their property, which, it was alleged, ranged from 1 foot to 18 inches in height at its crest and extending in length at the extremities of the embankment. It was further alleged that, during the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, that embankment had been extended a further distance of 100 feet, and made from 2 to 4 feet higher, thus diverting the natural flow of the surface waters and causing the same to impound and cover *361 with water- some 40 acres of plaintiff’s land, to' his damage in the aggregate of $800, and he prayed that the embankment complained of might be abated and the defendants enjoined from constructing other or further embankments and for a recovery of damages.

The defendants pleaded in bar of the action the maintenance of the dam for some 20 years and also the judgment that had been rendered in th£ Hubbard suit.

The trial of that proceeding resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants, from which Bunch duly prosecuted an appeal to this court. On that appeal we ruled, in effect, that the pleas of limitation and res ad-judieata, presented by the defendants, was available and effective to the extent only of establishing their right under the common-law rule as it existed prior to May 20, 1015, to maintain the dam as originally constructed, but sustained the plea of plaintiff Bunch in so far as the dam had been enlarged and extended, if at all, after that date, and accordingly reversed and remanded the case for another trial upon those issues.

The decision so rendered was acquiesced in by the parties, whereupon Bunch, on November 8, 1928, filed his second amended original petition, alleging, substantially as before, an enlargement of the Thomas dam and resulting damage.

The defendants, as before, presented a general denial, the statute of ten years’ limitation, the Hubbard judgment,* and specially, among other things, that, if it should appear that the defendants had extended the embankment higher and longer since the rendition of the said judgment between Dave Thomas and H. H. Hubbard, they were compelled to do so by reason of the acts of third parties, including the owners of the lands now owned by Bunch and the commissioners’ court of Barker County in digging ditches and making levees and maintaining the public road with culverts on and across the same, and digging ditches on the sides of said road, thereby causing the accumulation of vast amounts of water and diverting the same from its natural flow and throwing it on defendant’s land.

After the introduction of the evidence, the case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, which, together with the answers thereto, are as follows:

“1. In August, 1915, was there a levee or embankment on the north side of defendants’ land and inside their fence on the south side of the public road and near the southeast corner of the plaintiff’s land and at the place testified about by the witnesses? Answer: Xes-.
“2. If you have answered ‘yes’ to the preceding question, then answer: Since August, 1915, have the defendants built up or added to the height of the said levee at the place: ref erred, to above and as the samé existed in-August,. 1915? Answer: Xes.
“3. If you have answered special issue No. 2 ‘yes’, then answer this special issue: Since' August, 1915, how much higher or additional' height, if any, have the defendants added to’ the said levee above inquired about? Answer: Two feet.
“4. Since August, 1915, -has the defendants or either of them extended the length of the old levee, if any, eastward? Answer: Xes. '
“5. If you have answered special issue No. 4 ‘yes,’ .then state in feet how much, feet or' inches, or both, said levee has been extended to the east, if any? Answer: 35 feet.
“6. Would water that falls on the plaintiff’s land and north and northwest of the place of the levee in question naturally flow to and across the defendant’s land, if unobstructed? Answer: Xes.
“7. If you have answered special issue-No.-6 ‘yes’ then answer: Does said levee as it-now exists obstruct the natural flow of water which would naturally flow to that point and cause such water to flow back and gather on plaintiff’s land? Answer: Xes.
“S. Does the surface water accumulate on and overflow more of plaintiff’s land? Answer: Xes.
“9. If you have answered special issue No. 8' ‘yes,’ then you will answer this issue: Is the extra accumulation of water and overflow on plaintiff’s land, if any, due to the said act and-acts, if any, of persons other than the defendants in the digging of ditches and in the construction and the maintaining the road in question? Answer: No.”

The court, upon the verdict, and a finding of its own that ‘‘the building of the same dam higher and the extension of the same eastward by the defendants impounded more waters on the land of plaintiff and caused' damages to the lands of plaintiff,” entered a judgment in favor of plaintiff, Bunch, requiring and directing defendants Thomas to obliterate and remove 35 feet of the dam beginning at the east end of the levee, and, in addition-thereto, remove from the top portion of the remainder of said levee and embankment 2 feet thereof for the entire length of same after the east 35 feet thereof has been destroyed.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 359, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-bunch-texapp-1931.