Wimmer v. Compton

560 P.2d 626, 277 Or. 313, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1119
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1977
Docket74-1396-E-2, SC 24327
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 560 P.2d 626 (Wimmer v. Compton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wimmer v. Compton, 560 P.2d 626, 277 Or. 313, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1119 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

*315 BRADSHAW, J., Pro Tempore.

This is a suit seeking to enjoin defendant from continuing to maintain a land fill placed on his real property which is alleged to have blocked the usual course of runoff of ordinary flood waters which had annually followed a natural course across defendant’s land.

It is claimed that such blockage causes the flood waters to go upon and flood plaintiffs’ real property. Plaintiffs seek, in addition to injunctive relief, to recover damages caused by the flooding of their property.

Defendant admits that during 1969 he raised the elevation of at least a portion of his property by depositing fill dirt thereon, but he denies all other claims of plaintiffs. Defendant’s affirmative answer and defense allege that the flooding of plaintiffs’ property was caused by other conditions.

The trial court by decree found

"that during 1969 defendant had allowed dirt to be placed on his property and said dirt has changed the elevation thereof to cause surface waters and ordinary flood waters to be cast upon plaintiff’s real property.”

The trial court denied damages to plaintiffs, finding that damages claimed were speculative. The decree required defendant to return his property to the same condition as it existed prior to the time the fill dirt was placed on said property during the year 1969.

Defendant appeals from the trial court’s decree, claiming as error that there, was no substantial evidence upon which it could be found that the filling of defendant’s property was the cause of flooding on plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs cross-appeal, assigning as error the trial court’s finding that damage to their property was speculative.

The relative location of the parties’ properties, of the adjoining properties, stréets, ditches, waterways, *316 and culverts, and the general topography of the area pertinent to this case can best be illustrated by the following sketch. This sketch is not to scale and does not purport to be accurate as to distances except those actually shown on the map, as proven by the evidence.

Plaintiffs’ property was acquired in 1944, and plaintiff Lavetus M. Wimmer has lived in the home (HI) since that time. This home is approximately 75 *317 years old. Plaintiff Max H. Wimmer is the son of Lavetus M. Wimmer. He was 14 years of age when the family moved onto the property where he lived until he went away and "got married.” He has been back to the property on a regular basis during his adult life. He is now 45 years of age. The home (H2) was built on the property in 1961.

Defendant acquired the property adjoining plaintiffs’ on the east in 1967. In 1967 he placed some fill dirt on the back, or south portion, of his property. Later, in 1969, additional fill was placed on defendant’s property north of the original fill. In 1973 additional dirt material was dumped in a pile on the northerly portion of defendant’s property by a construction contractor.

The properties of both parties, together with areas extending for some distance south and north, are all contained in a single runoff or drainage system of water from various sources. This runoff or drainage flows naturally from south to north. The waters in this system consist of Griffin Creek drainage to the south of Sunset Avenue, collections of surface waters in natural ditches and artificial or man-made ditches, and an irrigation ditch south of Sunset Avenue. This general drainage system flows through an open ditch commencing on the north side of Sunset Avenue and running north along Courtright’s east boundary and the boundary line between plaintiffs’ and defendant’s properties to West Second Street. This ditch normally receives waters from a 36-inch culvert and several 12-inch culverts running under Sunset Avenue. Two 24-inch culverts run under West Second Street at the northern terminus of this ditch and, in normal times, carry the water from the ditch north under West Second Street. The land north of West Second Street was owned by Mr. Wimmer’s aunt and is characterized as a "tule patch” with a thick growth of cattails. A ditch or waterway running half way north to McAn-drews Street through this area was kept clear by Mr. Wimmer until he left home. From that point, half way *318 between East Second Street and McAndrews Street, the land flattens out, becoming low, and collects water. The system then proceeds north under McAndrews Street through the two culverts; one, 36 inches, and one, 24 inches. The bottom of each culvert lies approximately two feet above the ground level, which allows considerable collection of flood water in the area between West Second Street and McAndrews Street. The land between West Second Street and McAndrews Street drops in elevation approximately two feet. The distance between these streets is undisclosed by the evidence. The land areas to the west, east and south of plaintiffs’ and defendant’s properties are generally at a higher elevation. Almost annually, for many years, there have been flooding problems throughout the general area caused by excessive rains and runoff.

Plaintiffs contend that for many years prior to 1967 a natural and defined channel or drainage of ordinary flood waters overflooded the ditch adjacent to defendant’s west boundary, crossed over defendant’s land and West Second Street and thereafter rejoined the main drainage system south of McAndrews Street. They further contend that by filling his property, defendant has cut off or curtailed such natural, ordinary flood course and has caused the ordinary flood waters to go upon plaintiffs’ property.

Where, in times of flood, any part of a stream or water course which becomes separated from the main body flows an ordinary and consistent course and returns to the natural channel as it recedes, it is, properly speaking, a natural water course. Such flooding must be ordinary as opposed to extraordinary flooding. Ordinary flooding is that which occurs annually or at certain seasons or other regular intervals, which is not of unprecedented magnitude, and which is generally regarded as ordinary. Wellman et ux v. Kelley and Harrison, 197 Or 553, 252 P2d 816 (1953); Schweiger et ux v. Solbeck et ux, 191 Or 454, 230 P2d 195, 29 ALR2d 435 (1951); Price v. Oregon Railroad Co., 47 Or 350, 83 P 843 (1906).

*319 In Wellman, supra, an upstream owner, through whose land coursed a long established and well defined ordinary flood water course, was successful in prohibiting an adjacent downstream owner from obstructing that ordinary flood water course to the detriment of the upstream owner. This court quoted with approval from 56 Am Jur 510, Waters § 18:

"* * * Without the consent of the other proprietors who may be affected by his operations, an upper proprietor has no right unreasonably to interrupt or retard the natural flow of water, to the injury of lower owners, nor has a lower proprietor the right to throw the water back upon the proprietors above * * (Emphasis supplied by Wellman court.) 197 Or at 565-66.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Senn v. Bunick
594 P.2d 837 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
560 P.2d 626, 277 Or. 313, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimmer-v-compton-or-1977.