Viestenz v. Arthur Township

129 N.W.2d 33, 1964 N.D. LEXIS 106
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1964
Docket8117
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 N.W.2d 33 (Viestenz v. Arthur Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Viestenz v. Arthur Township, 129 N.W.2d 33, 1964 N.D. LEXIS 106 (N.D. 1964).

Opinion

ERICKSTAD, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court of Cass County dated April 12, 1963, which denied an application on the part of Charles and Ingrid Viestenz for an order requiring the defendants to comply with the mandatory injunction heretofore entered in this case.

*34 In. 1950 the present petitioners as plaintiffs brought .an action against the township and its supervisors, alleging that the township had reconstructed certain public highways bordering the plaintiffs’ property in such a manner that the highways obstructed the natural flow and drainage of surface water, causing flooding of the plaintiffs’ land. The plaintiffs asked that the township be permanently enjoined from obstructing the natural and free flowage of surface water over, upon, and across their land and that it be further enjoined from permitting surface water flowing into and accumulating in the ditches of the said public highways to overflow the plaintiffs’ adjacent land. The district court refused to grant the permanent injunction, vacated the temporary injunction which it had granted, and dismissed the plaintiffs’ complaint.

On appeal the majority of this court concluded its opinion as follows:

“The plaintiffs are therefore entitled to an injunction restraining the defendants from maintaining the highways along plaintiffs’ land in such a manner as to impound surface waters on their land. They are also entitled to a mandatory injunction directing the defendants to construct or alter the highway grades or ditches, or both, so as to provide for the outlet of surface waters from the plaintiffs’ land and prevent the recurrent overflow of the land herein involved by waters flowing in or accumulating in the highway ditches.
“There is some evidence that an outlet for the accumulated waters may be obtained by placing a culvert through the embankment of the east and west highway at the southeast corner of plaintiffs’ land and deepening the ditch toward the south along the section line.
.“The evidence also indicates that if the plaintiffs’ private driveway, which appears to have been constructed with- . out authority, is removed, the ditch towards the north from the southeast corner of plaintiffs’ land along the east side'of their land may be deepened through the east-west ridge to provide an outlet towards the natural drainage to the north and east.
“The best method, however, of finding an outlet for these waters must be determined by the township board in accordance with good engineering practices as provided in Sec. 24-0633, ND RC 1943. See also Ritter v. Drainage District No. 1, 148 Neb. 873, 29 N.W.2d 782, 788.
“The judgment of the District Court is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance herewith.” Viestenz v. Arthur Tp., 78 N.D. 1029, 54 N.W.2d 572.

Pursuant to this opinion judgment on remittitur was entered by the Clerk of District Court of Cass County on August 27, 1952. The pertinent paragraphs read as follows :

“2. That the above named defendants, their officers, servants, agents and employees be permanently enjoined from maintaining the highway located and situated adjacent to and along the plaintiffs’ land described as the South Half (Si/á) of Section Twenty-one (21), Township One Hundred Forty-two (142), Range Fifty-two (52), Cass County, North Dakota in such a manner so as to impound surface waters on said land; and the said defendants, their officers, servants, agents and employees are-further permanently enjoined from in any manner obstructing the natural and free flowage of surface waters over, upon and across the lands of the said plaintiffs above described and the said defendants, their officers, servants,agents, employees are further permanently enjoined from permitting surface waters flowing into and accumulating in the said ditches of said public highways so as to overflow and become impounded on the said plaintiffs’ land above described.
*35 “3. That said defendants, their officers, servants, agents and employees shall forthwith construct or alter the highway grades or ditches, or both located and situated adjacent to said plaintiffs’ lands above described so as to provide for the outlet of surface waters from the said plaintiffs’ land and so as to prevent the recurrent overflow of the said lands above described by waters flowing in or accumulating in the said highway ditches; and said defendants, their officers, servants, agents and employees are further ordered to forthwith construct said highway and ditches so as to permit the free flowage of surface waters according to the natural courses of the surface and terrain of the area in which the plaintiffs’ lands are located, in accordance with good engineering practices as provided by law.”

The injunction which it is sought to enforce was indefinite in its provisions, in that it was left to the township board to make provision that plaintiffs’ land should not be flooded by the obstruction of the natural flow of surface waters through the adoption of good engineering practices.

It is contended that the means adopted by the board in an attempt to comply with the injunction have not been effective and do not constitute good engineering practices, and that the only effective way of preventing plaintiffs’ land from being flooded by the obstruction of the natural flow of surface waters and thus comply with the injunction is to reestablish the natural flow of such waters. An order directing defendants to take such action is therefore requested. Such a proceeding is appropriate, as the court has continuing jurisdiction for the purpose of enforcing and making, the permanent injunction effective. Halsrud v. Brodale, 247 Iowa 1047, 77 N.W.2d 922.

The question thus submitted is a question of fact.

To provide the proper factual background we quote from the 1952 opinion of the majority of this court, as follows:

“The evidence shows that the plaintiffs are, and have for the last five, years been the owners of the S½ of Sec. 21, Township 142, Range 52 in Arthur Township, Cass County, North Dakota. This is farm land located about twenty miles west of the Red River where the terrain generally is flat and level. A township road had some years ago been graded east and west along the south edge of plaintiffs’ land, a distance of one mile. This roadway was rebuilt in the late summer of 1950. No culverts were used in the construction of that roadway. In 1946 a ditch and an embankment were constructed on the section line north and south on the east side of plaintiffs’ land, jointly by the Soil Conservation Service and the defendants. That embankment was formed into a roadway and joined the east-west roadway at . the southeast corner of the plaintiffs’ land forming there a square corner. No outlet for any water accumulating there was provided.
“The plaintiffs’ buildings are located on the Southeast Quarter (SEJ4) plaintiffs’ land just east of the quarter line.

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.W.2d 33, 1964 N.D. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viestenz-v-arthur-township-nd-1964.