Wilson v. Hagins

295 S.W. 922, 116 Tex. 538, 1927 Tex. LEXIS 122
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1927
DocketNo. 4275.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 922 (Wilson v. Hagins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Hagins, 295 S.W. 922, 116 Tex. 538, 1927 Tex. LEXIS 122 (Tex. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice PIERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendants in error, A. J. and B. J. Hagins, instituted this suit against W. T. Wilson, plaintiff in error, and Walter Carlisle, alleging that there is a stream traversing the several tracts of land owned by the parties to this suit. They alleged that plaintiff in error Wilson had erected an embankment and ditch on the lands owned by himself and by Carlisle, and that said embankment and ditch diverted flood waters flowing through Duck Creek and a slough coming out of said creek from their natural course and on to the lands of the defendants in error, to their damage. They prayed for damages, and for an injunction restraining plaintiff in error and Walter Carlisle from maintaining the embankment and ditch, and for a mandatory injunc *542 tion commanding them to take down said embankment and to fill up said ditch.

Plaintiff in error W. T. Wilson denied that there is any slough coming out of Duck Creek, as alleged by defendants in error, or that there was any natural flow of water through such a slough, and denied that any flood waters had been diverted by. said embankment or ditch onto the land of defendants in error Hagins, or that their land was damaged as a result of water diverted onto their land by him.

As stated in the dissenting opinion of Associate Justice Boyce, “the ditch and embankment were constructed in part over Car-lisle’s land and in part over Wilson’s land. The work was done by Wilson with Carlisle’s consent, under a contract by which Carlisle paid Wilson $150 in part payment of the cost of the work, and in consideration also of Wilson’s agreement to hold Carlisle harmless from all damages that might be recovered against Carlisle on account of its construction and maintenance.”

The theory of the defense, as pleaded and proven by plaintiff in error Wilson, as stated in the dissenting opinion of Associate Justice Boyce, "was to the effect that the channel of Duck Creek where it ran through Carlisle’s land and in the big bend became clogged, causing the overflow of its banks above that point, resulting in the overflow of both Wilson’s land and of defendant’s land below this point; that the ditch and embankment put back into the channel of Duck Creek the water that would otherwise have remained in the channel but for the clogged condition of the channel referred to; that the channel of Duck Creek was sufficient to carry off the water after it had been turned back into its regular channel, and that the overflow on plaintiff’s land was of water that overflowed the east bank of Duck Creek a considerable distance above and north of the point where Wilson’s ditch ran into the channel, and that the ditch had nothing to do with the overflow of plaintiffs’ land.”

Upon special issues submitted to it, the jury found as follows as set out in the majority opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals' by Associate Justice Hall:

“(1) The defendants did not divert the flood waters of Duck Creek and cause them to flow onto and over the lands of the plaintiff A. J. Hagins.

“(2) Defendants did not divert the waters of Duck Creek, causing them to flow onto and over the lands of plaintiff B. J. Hagins.

*543 “The third and fourth issues, as follows, were answered in the negative:

“(3) If you find that the defendants did divert the flood waters of Duck Creek and thereby caused them to flow onto and over the lands of plaintiff A. J. Hagins, was plaintiff A. J. Hagins’ land damaged thereby?

“(4) If you find that the defendants did divert the flood waters of Duck Creek, thereby causing them to flow onto and over the land of plaintiff B. J. Hagins, was plaintiff B. J. Hagins’ land damaged thereby?

“By Issues Nos. 5 and 6 the jury were requested to find to what extent the lands of A. J. and B. J. Hagins were damaged, to both of which issues the jury answered, ‘None’.”

In accordance with the findings of the jury, the Honorable District Court entered judgment that W. T. Wilson and Walter Carlisle did not by means of the embankment, levees, and ditch divert, or cause to be diverted, the flood waters of any slough or of Duck Creek onto the lands of A. J. and B. J. Hagins, or either of them, and that their lands were not damaged by the acts of Wilson and Carlisle, and that they were not entitled to the injunction prayed for, and entered judgment accordingly in favor of Wilson and Carlisle.

In a very voluminous opinion the majority of the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals reversed and remanded the case for a new trial. A dissenting opinion was filed by Associate Justice Boyce, in which he held that the judgment of the District Court should be affirmed on the answers of the jury to the first and second issues.

The holding of Judge Boyce that the answers of the jury to Questions Nos. 1 and 2, that plaintiff in error Wilson and Walter Carlisle did not divert flood waters, or cause them to flow onto the lands of defendants in error, was conclusive of the case, is clearly correct.

The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals in the majority opinion held that the facts conclusively showed that the building of the embankment and-ditch necessarily must have diverted, and did divert, water and throw it upon the land of defendants in error. The holding is that the facts are conclusively in favor of defendants in error, and that under the application of “natural laws” and “physical facts” there was no evidence upon which the jury could answer Questions Nos. 1 and 2 in favor of plaintiff in error Wilson. One cannot read the elaborate majority opinion without being convinced that such is the view of the majority of the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals in this case, and is in *544 accord with the insistence of the defendants in error Hagins that a peremptory instruction in their favor should have been given by the trial court. This, we think, as a matter of law was erroneous. Both the pleadings and the evidence amply raised and supported the issues presented in said Special Issues Nos. 1 and 2 to the jury. Plaintiff in error’s defense was a valid and effective one, going to the very heart of the case, and it was both pleaded and proven, and the jury found the facts to be, that the embankment and ditch erected by plaintiff in error Wilson diverted no water onto the land of defendants in error, and that no water went onto the land of defendants in error other than that which would have gone there anyway and regardless of said embankment and ditch; and, further, that defendants in error suffered no damage from any water that was diverted onto their land by plaintiff in error. Reference is made to the majority opinion of the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals, 262 S. W., 770, and also to the dissenting opinion of Associate Justice Boyce, 262 S. W., 782.

The majority of the court held that it was error for the trial court in framing special issues in this case to confine them to a finding whether the lands had been injured, and in not so framing the issues to permit the jury to find whether the lands would be injured and damaged in the future by such diversion of water.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 922, 116 Tex. 538, 1927 Tex. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-hagins-tex-1927.