Walton v. Siems

71 S.W.2d 586, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 509
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1934
DocketNo. 1483.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 586 (Walton v. Siems) 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
Walton v. Siems, 71 S.W.2d 586, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 509 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, Chief Justice.

Appellant and appellees, are adjoining landowners. As a matter of convenience, they will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendants. Plaintiff, W. T. Walton, sued the defendants, Walter Siems and wife, Clara Siems, for damages alleged to have resulted' from the changing of a natural water course extending across the land of both parties, and for an injunction restraining the continuance of such condition. The defendants alleged that plaintiff had constructed a system of ditches, terraces, and levies on his farm, which caused the surface water thereon to converge at one point and there flow onto and over their lands, resulting, by reason of such concentration, in great damage to them. They further alleged that, to protect themselves from such injury, they dug a ditch from the point where such concentrated flow of water entered upon their land, to carry such water northward past their cultivated lands and to discharge the same upon their pasture lands, where less damage would be inflicted thereby, that said ditch was located along the dividing line between them and plaintiff, but wholly on their own land, and that the digging of the same was made necessary by the wrongful acts of the plaintiff as aforesaid. They further alleged that plaintiff could have avoided any injury from the flow of water down said ditch at small and insignificant cost. They also asked for an injunction restraining plaintiff from permitting the water so concentrated to flow upon their land. Plaintiff alleged in reply that the damage sued for by him resulted from the overflow upon his lands of water from the ditch constructed by defendants.

Testimony was introduced tending to show that plaintiff’s land was higher than defendants’ land; that the natural flow of surface water was diagonally from plaintiff’s land onto the land of the defendants; that plaintiff had terraced his land and constructed certain ditches thereon; that the effect thereof was to concentrate surface water flowing on his land and cause the same to flow in a volume upon the land of defendants *587 about midway of the dividing line between the two tracts; that defendants thereupon dug a ditch on their own land along said line, erected a dam-at the head thereof, and thereby effectively diverted the water so entering their land into such ditch and through the same, past their cultivated land onto their pasture land, from which point it flowed across their pasture and into a natural water course. There was testimony tending to show that on some occasions such ditch overflowed and water therefrom ran over the line and onto the land of plaintiff. The statement of facts is voluminous, and the maps shown to have been used to elucidate the testimony on the trial are not contained in such statement. In the absence of' such maps, much of the testimony is practically unintelligible. A critical analysis of the testimony is, however, deemed unnecessary.

The case was submitted on special issues, in response to which the jury found, in substance, that:

(1) Defendants diverted the flow of water from its natural course.
(2) After such water was diverted, it overflowed and ran on the land of plaintiff.
(3) Plaintiff’s land was damaged by such diverted water in the sum of $10.

Defendants requested special issues, which were answered by the jury. Said answers, so far as material in this appeal, were, in substance, as follows:

(a) Plaintiff, by a system of ditches and terraces, diverted water from his land to the land of defendants with increased volume and force so that it was necessary for defendants to protect their land by the construction of a ditch thereon.
(b) The water so diverted onto the land of defendants and caused by them to flow in said ditch was surface water.
(c) Plaintiff could have avoided injury therefrom by taking reasonable action to prevent the same.

The court received the verdict, and, after reciting the findings in favor of the respective parties, held, in effect, that the findings in favor of defendants precluded a recovery by plaintiff of the damages in the sum of $10 assessed in his favor, and rendered judgment that plaintiff take nothing against the defendants and that the injunctive relief prayed for by him be denied; that the defendants take nothing by their cross-action against the plaintiff and that the injunctive relief prayed for by them be denied.

Opinion.

Plaintiff’s first contention is that the-court erred in not rendering judgment in his favor against the defendants for the sum of $10 on findings (1), (2), and (3) made by the jury as aforesaid. He also contends in that connection that the court erred in failing to enjoin defendants from further diversion of such water. Plaintiff, in presenting such contentions, recites, but does not discuss,, findings (a), (b), and (c) madé by the jury as above recited in response to issues submitted, at the request of the defendants. In considering the forpe and effect of the findings in favor of the plaintiff, we must keep in mind that the jury found that the water involved herein was surface water, and did not find that a depression, which plaintiff contended extended from his land across the land of defendants, was a natural water course. The rule announced in Johnson v. McMahan, 118 Tex. 633, 15 S.W.(2d) 1023, cited by plaintiff, cannot therefore be applied in this case. While lowland is, under existing law, charged with servitude to receive from higher land adjoining surface water according to its natural flow, it is not subject to such servitude when the natural flow has been, changed, diverted, and concentrated. The-owner of the servient land has a right to-repel diverted and concentrated water and; by proper construction prevent it from entering upon or flowing over his land, notwithstanding his land is subject to servitude-to receive such water in its natural or diffused flow. Bunch v. Thomas, 121 Tex. 225, 49 S.W.(2d) 421; Higgins v. Spear, 118 Tex. 310, 15 S.W.(2d) 1010. The jury not only-found that the water involved herein was surface water, but further found that plalhv tiff had diverted and concentrated the same and that the ditch dug by defendants was-necessary to protect their own land' from injury from such diverted and concentrated-water. Plaintiff does not in his brief complain of either the form or substance of- the-issues in response to which findings (a) and! (b) as afox-esaid were returned by the jury. Neither does he contend that such- findings-are without support in the evidence. Absent-some specific complaint, we consider it sufficient to say that said findings, supplemented-by such further findings as the trial, court-must be deemed, in support of the judgment' rendered, to have made from the evidence,, were sufficient to preclude a judgment in favor of plaintiff on the findings in his favor as aforesaid. Since the judgment of the trial. *588 court will be reversed and the cause remanded on the issue next considered, we will not further discuss the testimony.

Plaintiff further contends that the court erred in overruling his motion to set aside the verdict on the ground that the jury were improperly influenced by the defendants’ request that they be allowed to visit and view the premises.

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71 S.W.2d 586, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walton-v-siems-texapp-1934.