Webb v. Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District

18 N.W.2d 563, 146 Neb. 61, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 62
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1945
DocketNo. 31891
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 563 (Webb v. Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District, 18 N.W.2d 563, 146 Neb. 61, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 62 (Neb. 1945).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover for damages to growing crops, improvements, and other personal property by surface floodwaters, alleged.to have been wrongfully cast upon his land by defendant’s irrigation canal. A jury awarded plaintiff a verdict for $1,000' upon which the trial court entered judgment. Motion for new trial was overruled and defendant appealed, contending that the court erred in refusing to sustain defendant’s motion for directed verdict at the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, in giving and failing to give certain instructions, and in refusing to give defendant’s requested instructions. It is also claimed that the verdict is contrary to and not sustained by the law and the evidence. We find that these assignments of error cannot be sustained.

As we view it, the evidence becomes of primary importance to a decision of the case. The record discloses without dispute that plaintiff is a farmer who owns and farms certain land northeast of Odessa in Buffalo County, Nebraska. Defendant is a public power and irrigation district, organized and operating under the statutes of this state (Ch. 70, art. 6, R. S. 1943). As spch it operates and maintains an irrigation canal which runs along the south side of plaintiff’s land. A natural surface drainway or draw, forked at its upper northern source, crosses plaintiff’s land from the north toward the south just east of his improvements. Before construction of the canal this draw carried runoff or excess surface waters from plaintiff’s land toward the south to the Platte river. After the canal was constructed the draw emptied such waters into the canal.

[63]*63Some distance west of plaintiff’s land are three other natural surface water drainways or draws located on the lands of others. They come out of the hills northwest thereof and carry runoff or excess surface waters from the lands of others north and west of plaintiff. Before construction of the canal they carried all such waters south and west to the Platte river. After construction of the canal such waters all emptied into the canal and were thus ordinarily carried down past plaintiff’s land. However, if the canal was full and these waters could not all get into the canal they of necessity were forced back to the north out of the canal, and if sufficient in volume would come down along the north bank thereof and thence east upon and over plaintiff’s land.

There is competent evidence that no dredging or repair work had been done on the canal for many years. Further, three or four feet of sand had washed into the canal from the river, and the banks of the canal were in bad shape, thin in places from sloughing off and caving in, all of which filled in the bottom of the canal and thereby limited its carrying capacity. A concrete wall originally set at the edge of the bank east of plaintiff, then stood eight or ten feet out in the canal. Trees had grown in the sides and in the botr tom of the canal, some of which had fallen over or leaned over thereby catching debris, slowing up and diverting the flow of its waters. There had been breaks in the canal, prior to the trouble presently involved, but no steps had been taken to increase its capacity or put in spillways to drain such flood waters out of the canal to the south. There is evidence that this is not a proper method or manner of operating and maintaining the canal.

It also appears in the evidence that on June 13, 1943, at about 4:30 p. m. rain began falling upon plaintiff’s premises. Further, just previous to that time the canal was carrying approximately half its capacity of clear river water. It rained for about an hour and a half, not exceedingly hard, and with a measured volume of 1.95 inches. Thereafter the excess surface waters from this rain drained over plaintiff’s land into his draw and out into the canal [64]*64without any damage by flooding. However, a heavier rain fell to the north and west of plaintiff upon other lands, and about 6 :S0 or 7:00 p. m. floodwaters-began coming from the west along the north bank of and outside the canal down upon plaintiff’s land, inundating his improvements and growing crops. These surface waters had piled up from the north and west against the canal which was then filled with water. They backed up from the canal, flooded out to the north, and thence east upon plaintiff’s property with such force as to take his fences into his draw toward the east. Floodwaters also flowed clear over the top of the north bank of the canal due south of plaintiff’s house. The south bank of the canal eventually broke east of plaintiff and hastened the runoff of the floodwaters toward the south. However, the plaintiff’s crops and buildings were flooded for approximately twelve hours and suffered substantial damages therefrom.

The original grant of right of way for the canal which plaintiff concedes is binding upon him, provides, in substance, that défendant has the right to flow water over plaintiff’s land by the construction of a canal, without a north bank across the draws and ravines; and with the. right to waste surplus water out of the canal into any of such draws, ravines and depressions. That plaintiff and defendant are both bound thereby, and entitled to the benefits and subject to the burdens incident to the exercise of such rights, cannot be questioned.

It is the contention of defendant that by virtue of this grant plaintiff has waived, or is estopped from claiming, damages to his crops or property from the overflow or wastage of waters over and upon his land unless such damages are shown to have been the result of negligence in the operation and maintenance of the canal. In this connection to avoid liability defendant argues that there is no evidence of overflow except in plaintiff’s draw, as permitted by the grant, and that there is no evidence that defendant was negligent in the operation and maintenance of its canal, which we find has no support in the record.

[65]*65The evidence is that excess surface waters from plaintiff’s land had already drained out from his draw into the canal of defendant, after the rain upon plaintiff’s land had ceased, without any damage to him from flooding. Further, that plaintiff’s land never floods by waste waters alone flowing back out of the canal; that it is physically impossible for such waste waters to flow out into the draw from the canal and raise the water high enough to flood plaintiff’s other land where the damages occurred. Plaintiff makes no claim that any of his damages accrued in any such manner. The evidence is clear that it did .not do so. There is no evidence in this record which could sustain a finding that any of plaintiff’s claimed damages proximately resulted from wasting surplus water out of the canal into the draw on plaintiff’s land. Rather there is competent evidence that there was an overflow on the north canal bank and that a volume of accumulated and collected surface waters flooded down on plaintiff’s land from the west to his damage, which would never have reached his land but for the acts of defendant and the intervention of its canal.

The draws involved are all conceded to be natural drain-ways. It was held in Leaders v. Sarpy County, 134 Neb. 817, 279 N. W. 809, quoting from Crummel v. Nemaha County, 118 Neb. 355, 224 N. W. 864: “It is the duty of those who build structures across natural drainways to provide for the natural passage through such’ obstructions of all waters which may be reasonably anticipated to drain there, and this is a continuing duty.” See, also, 27 R. C. L., sec. 77, p. 1148; 67 C. J., sec. 291, p. 868. It was only recently held in Hengelfelt v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 563, 146 Neb. 61, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-platte-valley-public-power-irrigation-district-neb-1945.