Winchester Water Works Company v. Holliday

45 S.W.2d 9, 241 Ky. 762, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 S.W.2d 9 (Winchester Water Works Company v. Holliday) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winchester Water Works Company v. Holliday, 45 S.W.2d 9, 241 Ky. 762, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 161 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

Various farmers sued this water company for damages done to their farms by a flood of water cast upon them by the breaking of what is, in this record, referred to as a flash dam belonging to the water company. To save costs it was agreed that all of them might join in one action. They did so, all the cases were heard together, and judgments against the water company were r¿covered as follows:

Lewis Holliday, $240.
A._C. Clark, $183-50.
Elizabeth W. Quisenberry, $5-62.50.
Robert L. Quisenberry, $786.
C. N. Royalty, $696.

*763 The water company has made a motion here for appeal from the first two of these judgments and has prosecuted, from the other three judgments, an appeal granted it by the trial court.

This court has no jurisdiction of the Clark judgment as it is less than $200, and that appeal is now dismissed. The other four judgments will be disposed of in one opinion.

The Winchester Water Works Company has its reservoir about 4% miles from Winchester, consisting of two artificial lakes known as the Lower Lake and the Upper Lake. The Lower Lake is formed by the waters of Howard creek, across which is built a large concrete dam, consisting of a wing wall 112 feet in length on the west side and a similar wing wall 74 feet long on the east side. Between these wing walls is a concrete dam 150 feet long and 25 feet high. The top of this concrete dam is 3% feet lower than the level of the wing walls, thus making a spillway between these wing walls of 150 feet in length and 3Va feet in height. The total length of this entire dam from the extreme end of each wing wall, or from “hill to hill” (including the 150 feet of concrete dam between the wing walls) is 336 feet. Without this spillway, and with a solid dam instead, more water would be confined in the reservoir during rainy seasons than needed; therefore, this spillway in the center of the dam allowed the surplus water to escape through it. The dam of the Lower Lake has been a permanent structure for more than thirty years, but in recent years the Lower Lake has been filling up to some extent and for the purpose of impounding or holding more water during dry seasons, the water company has been installing, each year since 1921 upon the 150 feet of spillway portion of the concrete dam, .a temporary flashboard dam 150 feet long and 15 inches high made in 15 sections or panels, thus elevating the spillway dam temporarily 15 inches. If the water gets so high in the Lower Lake, while this flashboard dam is installed, as to flow over its top, sections of it in time will wash out. This flash dam washed out on June 29, 1928, and on July 13, 1928; which let the impounded waters in a body tear down the creek below with such force and violence that trees and rock fences, stone abutments, and an old rock darn, which had stood undisturbed for over a hundred years, were torn out and washed away, some of the large stones from this old *764 dam being scattered along down the creek for a mile below.

Mr. Attersall, the company’s superintendent, admits, on cross-examination, that after the first installation, in 1921, of this flash dam, certain sections had washed out in April, 1923, June, 1926, July, 1926, twice in June, 1927, showing that as the years passed and the mud accumulated in the bottom of the reservoir this temporary structure became less able to stand the pressure, as it stood from 1921 to 1923 with only one break and from 1923 to 1925 with only one break, but it broke once in 1926, and twice in 1927, and this suit was for the two times it all went out in 1928.

The water company does not complain of the amounts of these recoveries, but insists the court erred (a) in not sustaining its motion for a directed verdict in its favor made at the close of the evidence for the plaintiffs and renewed at the close of all the evidence, and (b) in giving and refusing instructions.

The basis of its contention for a directed verdict is this, which is taken from the brief filed on its behalf: “In their petition plaintiffs stated, as a conclusion and description of the dam, that, ‘it was too weak to stand the pressure of high water such as had occurred previously.’ The proof shows that this flash board dam was installed with the expectation that it would go out under certain conditions. It was only a temporary structure and had gone out frequently, but never at any time because of its negligent or faulty construction or any negligence on the part of the Water Company. At the close of the case the evidence disclosed that not a particle of negligence had been shown or proven against the Water Company in the construction or maintenance of the flash board dam. Its character and construction was fully testified to by Mr. Attersall and others, and the ‘Blue Print’ of the plan and specifications from which it was built, prepared by Mr. Wheeler, Supervising Engineer, was introduced. No evidence was introduced to show that these plans and specifications were faulty in any respect or that the dam was not constructed in accordance with them. The evidence further revealed that the flash board dam was first installed in 1921, and so long as the water in the Lower Lake remained on a level with the top of the flash board dam the dam held, but when it got so high as to flow over its top, portions of this temporary *765 dam would wash out. This is what it was expected to do, and this had occurred on- at least six different occasions since its installation.”

In other words, if a man should set a gun on his premises so constructed as to go off at intervals, and it did go off as designed and killed a horse in the pasture of a neighbor, under the water company’s idea of the law, the latter could not recover because the gun had gone off according to design. That cannot be the law.

The lands of Holliday et al. in this creek valley had upon them the servitude of receiving and enduring the effects of waters naturally gathering and flowing down this creek valley, but the Winchester Water Company as an upper proprietor had no right to gather and impound these waters and then suddenly let them loose upon the lands of these lower proprietors.

It is not a question of negligence. The sole question is: Did it do so? It admits that it did. Itsi liability for the damages resulting follows as a matter of law. See Lincoln Coal Co. v. Deaton, 229 Ky. 330, 17 S. W. (2d) 249; Steinke v. North Vernon Lumber Co., 190 Ky. 231, 227 S. W. 274; Ford Lumber & Mfg. Co. v. Clark, 68 S. W. 443, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 318; American Car & Foundry Co. v. Spears, 146 Ky. 736, 143 S. W. 377; 20 R. C. L., pp. 74, 75, 76, secs. 65, 66, 67; 27 R. C. L., p. 1151, sec. 79, p. 1194, sec. 111, p. 1099, sec. 35; 40 Cyc., pp. 647, 683.

Relative to the alleged error in giving and refusing-instructions, we find no essential difference between the principal instruction given and the corresponding one offered by the water company, except the words italicized in this clause taken from the instruction given:

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W.2d 9, 241 Ky. 762, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-water-works-company-v-holliday-kyctapphigh-1931.