Walther v. City of Cape Girardeau

149 S.W. 36, 166 Mo. App. 467, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 563
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 36 (Walther v. City of Cape Girardeau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walther v. City of Cape Girardeau, 149 S.W. 36, 166 Mo. App. 467, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 563 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

— In March, 1910, the city of Cape Girardeau, a city of the third class, cut a ditch ninety feet in length, width not given, but apparently about three feet, through and across a lot owned by plaintiff fronting on Frederick street in that city and constructed a permanent sewer therein partly of twenty-four inch and partly of eighteen inch pipe, connecting the same with a thirty inch sewer pipe which the city had before then laid under Frederick street when it filled up that street. The city had no permission or authority from plaintiff to cut through his lot and lay this pipe but claimed the right to do so under its authority to abate a nuisance. The nuisance complained of is claimed to have been created by plaintiff filling his lot up to the grade of Frederick street and thereby stopping the flow of water from low ground to the west of his premises and from the lands of others through plaintiff’s lot and thence into the sewer pipe which had been laid by the city under Frederick street. Preliminary to cutting the ditch through plain-ti’s property and laying the sewer pipe in it, the city caused a notice to be served upon the plaintiff that the stopping and filling of the drain and sewer pipe on Frederick street by him, adjacent to and in front of his lot had caused the water to accumulate in the “ditch, drain, depression and watercourse” above where plaintiff had stopped and filled the sewer pipe and drain and had caused water to stand in that place to a depth of three or four feet, covering an area of about 1000 square yards, forming a pond of “stagnant, filthy, obnoxious water and' giving rise to obnoxious and offensive and disagreeable odors, and is now, and will grow worse as the weather gets warmer, a public nuisance, endangering the public health, [473]*473and is a source of disease, to the great danger, damage, injury and annoyance of the public.” Plaintiff was therefore notified that acting under the order of the acting mayor and in accordance with the provisions of the ordinance of the city, he was notified by the chief of police to open the drain and sewer pipe closed by him or cause it to be opened within twenty-four hours of the service of this notice or to signify his willingness that the city officers might enter on his premises and make the proper opening and drain to remove the water and so abate the nuisance. Plaintiff was further notified that if he failed or refused to comply with the demand and request the chief of police would take the necessary steps to drain the pond or pool and abate the nuisance by making an opening through plaintiff’s lot and laying a drain pipe to connect with the one closed by him. This notice was served on the plaintiff on the 23rd of March. It appears by the testimony that on receipt of this notice plaintiff told some one of the officers of the city that he wanted a little time to consult his attorney about the matter and he thereupon telephoned to his attorney, who resided at Jackson in Cape Girardeau county, who told him that he would come down and examine into the matter in a day or two. At the expiration of the twenty-four hours, however, plaintiff not having taken steps to remove the obstruction by cutting a ditch through his premises and not having signified his willingness or given permission to the city to do so, the officers of the city, over the protest of plaintiff, entered upon his lot on Friday, the 25th of March, preliminary to doing the work of cutting the ditch through his premises. On Saturday, the 26th, plaintiff caused a notice to be served upon the mayor of the city that on Monday, at 2 o’clock p. m., he would present his application to the judge of the Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas in chambers, asking for a restraining order against the city. Without paying [474]*474attention to this notice, the officers of the city on that Saturday, the 26th, commenced cutting the ditch clear across plaintiff’s lot, a ditch some seven feet in depth at Frederick street and a foot or so deep at its western end, and with a force of from seven, eight or nine men, possibly more, kept up the work all during Saturday and until late Saturday night and all through Sunday until late that night and on Monday morning completed the work by laying the sewer-pipe through the whole width of plaintiff’s lot, cementing its joints and then filling up the trench. The petition for the writ was filed with the court named on the 26th, hut the work having then been finished, the cause went over to the November, 1910, term of the court. At that term defendants answered, the city in its separate answer justifying on the ground that the filling up of the lot by plaintiff in the manner filled by him was a nuisance in that it obstructed the flow of the water from the low ground to the west of him, it being set up in the answer that there was a natural watercourse and that the water in this pond or low land west of plaintiff was formed in part from springs and in part from waters falling from the heavens as also in part from water which flowed into it from a drain under the fill of the street next west of Frederick street. The individual ■defendants answered separately with general denials, two of the defendants however also pleading that while they were members of the city council at the time the alleged acts were committed, their terms had since expired and they were no longer officers of the city. On the hearing of the cause the court entered up an order sustaining plaintiff’s petition and ordered the city to remove the sewer pipe and fill up the ditch on or before the 10th of February, 1911, and thereafter refrain from entering upon the lot of plaintiff and digging any ditch or trench or constructing any sewer pipe through it. From this defendants, filing their motion for a new trial and saving exceptions [475]*475to that being overruled, have duly perfected their appeal to this court.

It is argued by the learned counsel for appellants that plaintiff had no right to stop- up the drain and cause a pond tó be formed on the adjacent lots to the injury of the owners and to the damage and injury of the public. They introduced much testimony in an endeavor to prove that the pond spoken of was formed in part by springs and that a ravine, which they claimed was a natural watercourse, led from that through the property of plaintiff and into the sewer under and across Frederick street and claimed that plaintiff, as the owner of the subservient or lower lot, had no right to interfere with the natural flow of the water.

It is entirely unnecessary to consider this phase of the case. While the private owners of what is referred to by the courts and text-writers as the dominant estate, that is property situated above or higher than that of the lower or subservient estate, have an undoubted right to apply to the courts for the protection of their land from what may be claimed to be illegal acts of the owner of the subservient estate in stopping the flowage of water, we know of no case and have been cited to none where a city or other public body, not the owner of the dominant estate, has any right to appeal to the courts for the protection of any claim to the flowage of water, that water not being a public or navigable stream. This is so whether the doctrine of the civil law or of the common law is to be applied. In our state, as was definitely determined in Abbott v. Kansas City, St. J. & C. B. R. Co., 83 Mo. 271, the common law rule as to the stoppage of surface water prevails.

Before dismissing this phase of the case from consideration, it is not out of place to remark that the overwhelmning weight of the testimony establishes the fact that there has never been a watercourse, in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 36, 166 Mo. App. 467, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walther-v-city-of-cape-girardeau-moctapp-1912.