Welty v. Vulgamore

14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 572
CourtPike Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 572 (Welty v. Vulgamore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pike Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welty v. Vulgamore, 14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 572 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

RUSSELL, J.

(Orally.)

The case of Robert Welty v. John M. Vulgamore, is a petition coming into this ¿ourt by appeal from the court below. The case is brought here upon an amended petition filed by the plaintiff, and it alleges that the plaintiff was, at the time hereinafter mentioned, which was in 1890, and still is, the owner in fee simple of eighty-five acres of land situate in this county, on the easterly side of the Scioto, and I might say, also alleges that it is situated on the exterior bend of the river. The plaintiff also alleges that the defendant (Vulgamore) is the owner of one hundred and forty-five acres of land situate on the westerly side of the Scioto river, and on the interior bend thereof. The plaintiff further alleges that in 1884, and before the plaintiff became the owner of the [573]*573said land, there occurred in said river a gr^at, unusual and unprecedented flood, whereby the lands of defendant were deluged and flooded; that the defendant witnessed the same and thereupon determined to construct an embankment of sufficient height and extent to withstand the pressure and turn the waters of the most unusual and extraordinary flood that might occur in the river. Then the plaintiff alleges that some time prior to February, 1898, and after the flood of 1884, the defendant constructed, upon his lands above described, within the bend of the river aforesaid, an embankment composed of earth and stone, about one hundred rods in length and of great and unreasonable height, extending from a point near the canal, in an easterly direction across the bottom to the river, near to low water mark in said river, or stream, said embankment being located about the middle of said bend and at right angles to the stream.

The plaintiff says that said levee was of sufficient height, length and extent to turn the overflow in case of the usual and ordinary, and the most unusual and extraordinary freshets, and the said embankment was higher by some feet than the highest flood that ever occurred in said stream, including the flood of 1898; that the effect of the said embankment in times of freshets, alike in usual and extraordinary floods in said river, is to form a dam to the overflow water of the river, and to prevent such overflow from passing into and over the lands aforesaid of the defendant; but such overflow waters are by said embankment diverted from their natural course down the river in a southerly direction and caused to flow easterly across said embankment and otherwise to flow across it and over upon the lands of the said plaintiff, that because of the bend in the river at said point, in times of freshets, the great body and volume of the overflow water would naturally flow over the lands of the defendant on the west side of the river, but by the erection and maintenance of said levee or dam, by the defendant, all of the said overflow is dammed up, forced along said embankment, and flows over the opposite side, upon the plaintiff’s lands, thereby relieving defendant’s lands and throwing the entire weight and burden of water upon the lands of the plaintiff, causing a more rapid and whirling current around to the east of the said levee and upon the lands of the plaintiff; that because of the increased force of the current of water occasioned by said embankment, the lands of plaintiff are being encroached upon, the river is being rapidly moved to the eastward, thereby diminishing the lands of plaintiff, by the encroachments of the river, and increasing the lands of the defendant by dccretion produced by the action of said river; that during the flood of 1898, and at all times of flood of said river, including both ordinary and usual freshets when said stream is out of banks, which is reasonably [574]*574expected and does occur during the rainy season oí each year (which said floods have occurred one or more times during the erection of said levee) the lands of the said plaintiff were overflowed' by the waters of the said river, and because of the embankment, the overflow on the said lands of the plaintiff was increased in violence, and said lands were entirely inundated, and by the rapid and swirling current, said waters washed off and carried away the soil from about thirty-five acres thereof, washed deep holes and gullies in the surface, deposited logs, debris and' gravel thereon, and undermined and washed away a large portion of the west side of the plaintiff’s lands, thereby rendering said lands wholly unfit for cultivation and destroying the same.

The plaintiff avers that said embankment is unreasonable in height and extends out into the river almost to low water mark, and by reason of the great and unreasonable height of the levee — the great and unreasonable height and length of said levee — plaintiff’s lands continue- to wash and undermine and be damaged by the ravages of the said stream at times of flood, as aforesaid, and each recurring flood will cause an additional injury to plaintiff’s lands, if said embankment is maintained at its present height.

The plaintiff in the case then further avers that said embankment was constructed by defendant at a point in the bend of the river, and at such length and height as would throw all the water off his lands, in times of freshets, onto the lands of the plaintiff; that the same was done in total disregard of plaintiff’s rights, etc. Wherefore, the plaintiff says that he has sustained great damage and asks for damages in the sum of $2,000, and asks that the defendant be enjoined from maintaining the embankment.

I have thus restated a large portion of the petition, from the fact that it is stated in an admirable manner; the claim of the plaintiff could not, I think, be stated in more concise and accurate form than is done m the petition.

To that petition the defendant files an answer, which in the first count, is a substantial denial of each of the material allegations in the petition; there are four counts, or rather three counts numbered, and the fourth paragraph, which is equivalent to a fourth defense.

As I said a moment ago, the first count in the answer copies the material allegations of the petition and then denies each; it might as well ’have been a general denial of all of the allegations, except the building, I take it, of this embankment, because that is the effect of it. In the second defense it sets up the statute of limitations — in the third defense — by way of an excuse for the building and erection of this embankment,- it sets up that these lands are agricultural lands and that the [575]*575defendant, for the purpose of protecting himself against the encroachments of the river, was compelled to construct this embankment. The fourth defense is a defense of estoppel. It alleges that at the time when the defendant was about to construct this embankment, that the grantor of the plaintiff, knowing that his land was being washed away, encouraged and induced him to make the embankment, thereby, as it is claimed by the defendant, the grantor of the plaintiff would be estopped, and the plaintiff coming in as grantee under the original grantor, would also be estopped from making any objection to the continuance of this embankment, because he had consented to and had encouraged the building of the same.

Now, so far as the matter of estoppel is concerned — taking it up in the reverse order in which it is presented — I might say, though, that there is a reply denying all the material averments and new matters set up in the answer, and the case comes to issue upon these questions.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welty-v-vulgamore-ohcirctpike-1901.