Toler v. Bear Creek Drainage Dist.

106 So. 83, 106 So. 88, 141 Miss. 851, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 210
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1925
DocketNo. 24948.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 106 So. 83 (Toler v. Bear Creek Drainage Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toler v. Bear Creek Drainage Dist., 106 So. 83, 106 So. 88, 141 Miss. 851, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 210 (Mich. 1925).

Opinions

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the court below making permanent a temporary organization of the Bear creek drainage district over the protest of the appellants, who own land in the district. The district embraces something over one hundred thirty-five thousand acres of land in the counties of Leflore, Sunflower, and Humphreys. It is bounded on the east by the Yazoo river, and partly by Roebuck Lake on the northeast. Roebuck Lake connects with the Yazoo river, but whether it is tributary thereto or is an outlet for flood waters thereof does not appear, and whether it is the one or the other is not material.

To the west of the district is the Sunflower river, a large stream which flows in a southerly direction and empties into the Yazoo river not a great distance before it reaches the Mississippi river. The elevation of the land in the district from the Yazoo river west rises until at a point some distance to the west' of the center thereof it reaches an elevation of one hundred eight feet above sea level. The surface water on the land east of this elevation, which we will hereafter designate as the divide, flows into the Yazoo river mainly through Bear creek into Wasp Lake, which connects with the river. The surface water on the land west of the divide flows into the Sunflower river largely through Dawson bayou. The Yazoo river overflows annually, and when *861 the water therein reaches an elevation of ninety-six feet above sea level, • it backs np Bear creek, and, when it reaches an elevation of one hundred eight feet above sea level, crosses the divide through natural depressions therein and flows through Dawson bayou into the Sunflower river for periods varying from three to six months. The elevations reached by the flood waters of the Yazoo river vary, sometimes reaching the height of one hundred fifteen feet above sea level. The extent of the inundation from the flood water of the Yazoo river of the land west of the divide depends on the elevation of the water above sea level.

One of the purposes for which the district is sought to be established is to prevent the flood water of the Yazoo river from inundating any of the land within the district, and is to be accomplished by the construction of a levee along the south bank of Roebuck Lake and the west bank of the Yazoo river. The levee will be pierced by a gap at Wasp Lake, in which gates will be placed, which will be closed when the water in the river reaches an elevation of ninety-six feet above sea level, and will be opened when it falls below that level.

After the levee is constructed, and when the gap therein at Wasp Lake is closed, the surface water of the district east of the divide will accumulate in Bear creek and overflow a part of the land on that side of the district, and when Bear creek reaches an elevation of one hundred eight feet it will go over the divide into the Sunflower river. In order to prevent this overflow the distict proposes to dig three ditches- across the divide of sufficient depth and width to carry the water from Bear creek, after the gap in the levee at Wasp Lake has been closed, across the divide into Dawson bayou, through which it will flow into the Sunflower river. These ditches will so conduct the water only when the gap in the levee at Wasp Lake is closed, and when that gap is open Bear creek will flow into the Yazoo river. When the gap in the levee at Wasp Lake is closed, no water from the Yazoo river will enter Bear creek or otherwise cross the *862 divide, and less will then be conducted across the divide by these ditches than now crosses it during the flood periods of the Yazoo river.

One of the objections in the court below to the establishment of the district was that Bear creek is a navigable stream, and consequently the district would be without power to obstruct its outlet into the Yazoo river. The court below heard evidence for and against this contention, and held that Bear creek is not a navigable stream, which holding is not here contested, and will not be inquired into.

The land owned by the appellants lies west of the divide, and the objection to the establishment of the district which-they here press is to the digging of the ditches by which the flood water of Bear creek will he conducted across the divide into the Sunflower river when the gap in the levee at Wasp Lake is closed.

One of the provisions of the statute under which this drainage district is sought to be organized is that such a district may be established “if it appear that the establishment thereof be necessary for the promotion of public health and for agricultural purposes,” and “be to the advantage of the owners of real property therein, and for the public benefit. ’ ’ Section 2, chapter 269, Laws of 1914 (Hemingway’s Code, section 4438). The purpose which it is sought to accomplish by the establishment of the district is to protect the land therein from inundation by the periodical overflows of the Yazoo river, which purpose the chancellor found on evidence so warranting: would be accomplished, by the levee and ditches which the district proposes to construct and dig. This finding of the chancellor is not seriously, and could not he successfully, contested. It may be that all of the land in the district will not be benefited to the same extent by the establishment of the district, but, if so, that fact is of no consequence, for equality of benefits is not essential to the formation of a drainage district.

The appellants admit that the levee proposed to be constructed will be beneficial to them, and they raise no *863 objection thereto. Their complaint is that a part of the scheme which the district proposes to pnt into effect, and which will be necessary in order to protect the land east of the divide from overflow, is to conduct the water which accumulates in Bear creek after its outlet into the Yazoo river has been closed by means of three ditches across the divide into the Sunflower river. Their contention in support of this objection in effect is that not only does the statute not confer upon drainage districts the right to conduct water from one watercourse to another, or from one watershed to another, but that so to do is expressly prohibited by sections 1 and 6, chapter 257, Laws of 1924, and under the common law, which the statute has not displaced, the appellants have the right to construct a levee along the divide sufficiently high to prevent the flood water of the Yazoo river from crossing it and overflowing their lands, which right i§ inconsistent' with and excludes any right in the appellee to conduct such flood water across the divide by means of ditches.

The authority of the legislature to enact laws for the establishment of drainage districts is derived from the police power. Cox v. Wallace, 100 Miss. 525, 56 So. 461. The purpose for which such districts may be and are established is to promote the public welfare (Cox v. Wallace, supra; Jones v. Drainage District, 102 Miss. 799, 59 So. 921), and the private drainage rights of the landowners who own the land composing the district become, ex necessitate, merged in and are supplanted by the rights relative thereto conferred by the statute on the district.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 83, 106 So. 88, 141 Miss. 851, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toler-v-bear-creek-drainage-dist-miss-1925.