Nininger v. Norwood

BRICKELL, C. J.

The original bill was filed by Mrs. Mary R. Norwood, a married woman, owning a plantation, partly as a statutory, and partly as an equitable separate estate, to enjoin the defendants, who own an adjoining plantation, from continuing thereon levees, or embankments, causing waters to flow back upon the lands of the complainant, which, following their natural outlet, had always flowed therefrom over the lands of the defendants. The material averments of the bill are : That a stream, known as “ Lake Creek,” runs through the plantation of Mrs. Norwood. In thnes of heavy rains, large quantities of water escaping over the banks of this stream, upon the lands of complainant, with the accumulations of rain water, have a natural outlet therefrom over the lands of the defendants. To prevent these waters from flowing over and flooding their lands, the defendants have erected embankments, or levees, which cause them to flow back and accumulate upon the lands of the complainant, rendering them less lit for cultivation, and in other respects injuring them.

The manifest theory upon which the bill proceeds is, that the lands of the defendants are burdened with the servitude of receiving and discharging the waters flowing down to them from the lands of the complainant. If that theory can be maintained, the bill presents a clear case for the interference of a court of equity. The jurisdiction of the court to enjoin the erection, or the continuance of private nuisances, compelling their abatement, at the instance of a party aggrieved, is- well established. When the legal right of the party complaining is clear and undoubted, and the wrong is not susceptible of adequate compensation in damages recoverable in an action at law, or is in its very nature and character continuous and constantly recurring, the interference of the court is necessary, to prevent irreparable injury and a multiplicity of suits. There is, in the contemplation of the court, a very just distinction between injuries in their nature temporary and fugitive, and injuries permanent, continuous, constantly recurring. In reference to temporary injuries, the intervention of the court may depend upon the adequacy of legal remedies. But, when the injury is permanent, continuous, constantly recurring, there may be a remedy at law, but its inadequacy is obvious. The court of law can not restore the party complaining to the condition in which he was before the wrong was done, and in which he has the legal right to remain unmolested; nor can it, by removing the cause, prevent the necessity for multiplied litiga*282tion. — "Wood on Nuisances, 812; High on Inj. §§ 501, et seq. Assuming that complainant has the clear legal right asserted, the defendants have invaded it, by obstructing the natural flow of the waters, causing them, in times of heavy rains, to flow back and accumulate upon the land of the complainant, submerging crops, interrupting cultivation, and deteriorating the fertility of the soil. The injury is permanent, continuous, and is of recurrence in all rainy seasons. It is irreparable injury, as that term is employed in a court of equity, for which legal remedies will not afford adequate redress, and against which a court of equity only can afford relief and protection. — Wood on Nuisances, 817. Nor, if the right of the complainant is clear —if, as matter of law, the lands of the defendants are burdened with the servitude claimed — -is it essential that, as a condition precedent to the interference of the court, the right should have been established by a verdict and judgment at law. Substantial, actual injury has resulted, and there can be no necessity for sending the party to a court of law for the determination of a mere legal question, compelling submission to the wrong during the pendency of the action.—Gardner v. Newburgh, 2 Johns. Ch. 162; Holman v. Boiling Spring Bleaching Co., 14 N. J. Eq. (1 McCarter) 335.

•The remaining, and more important question, involved in the demurrer to the bill, is the existence of the right asserted by the complainant. Whether, as the owner of the land upon which the waters escaping from the creek in times when it is swollen by heavy rains, with the waters accumulating by the fall of rain, the complainant has a natural easement in the lands of the' defendants, to the extent of the natural flow of these waters from her land, to and upon the lands of the defendants, is the controlling, decisive question. In Hughes v. Anderson, 68 Ala. 280, we considered the right of the owner of an upper parcel of lands to collect and concentrate the waters falling or originating upon his lands, increasing the flow, and discharging them in Sreater volumes upon the lower parcel. Following the case of Kauffman v. Griesemer, 26 Penn. St. 407, we held, that the owner of the upper or superior heritage had not the right to create new channels for the water falling or originating upon his lands, but that he could improve his lands, though the volume of water discharged by its accustomed channels was thereby increased. There are many interesting questions of growing importance, connected with the general subject of the rights of adjoining proprietors as to wrater falling or originating upon lands, but we confine our consideration to the single question the case presents.

The doctrine of the civil law is, that the owner of the upper or dominant estate has a natural easement or servitude in the *283lower or servient one, to discharge all waters falling or accumulating upon his land, which is higher, upon or over the land of the servient owner, as in a state of nature; and that such natural flow or passage of the waters can not be interrupted or prevented by the servient owner, to the detriment or injury of the estate of the dominant or any other proprietor. The doctrine is repudiated in some of the American courts, and it is asserted that the doctrine of the common law is, that there exists no such natural easement or servitude in favor of the owner of the superior or higher ground as to mere surface water; and that the owner of the inferior or lower estate may, if he choose, lawfully obstruct or hinder the natural flow of such water thereon, and, in so doing, may turn the same back upon, or off, or to, or over the lands of other proprietors, without liability for injuries occurring from such obstruction or diversion. — 3 Wait’s Actions and Defenses, 'ill; Angelí on Water-Courses, §§ 108 et seq. (7th ed). In England, the rule seems firmly adhered to, that lands are burdened with the servitude of receiving and discharging all waters that naturally flow down to them from the lands of an adjoining proprietor upon a higher level. Any interference with, or obstruction of the servitude by the lower owner, to the injury of the owner of the dominant estates, subjects him to liability for the resulting damage. — Wood on Nuisances, 422. This rale, with an exception, perhaps, as to town or city lots, is followed generally in this country.—Gillman v. Madison R. R. Co., 49 Ill. 484; Adams v. Walker, 34 Conn. 466; Kauffman v. Griesemer, 26 Penn. St. 406; Miller v. Lanbach, 47 Ib. 154; Ogburn v. Comer, 46 Cal. 346; Butler v. Peck, 16 Ohio St. 334; Watts v. Clifton, 22 Ib. 247; Swett v. Cutts, 50 N. H. 439.

In the very carefully considered case of Butler v. Peck, said Brinkerhoff, J., ;1 The principle seems to be established and indisputable, that when two parcels of land, belonging to different owners, lie adjacent to each other, and one parcel lies lower than the other, the lower one owes a servitude to the upper, to receive the water which naturally runs from it, providing the industry of man has not been used to create the servitude. Or, in other words more familiar to the students of the common law, the owner of the upper parcel of land has a natural easement in the lower parcel, to the extent of the natural flow of water from the upper parcel to and upon the lower.” And again it was said: “ The natural easement arises out of the relative altitudes of adjacent surfaces as nature made them, and these altitudes may not be artificially changed to the damage of an adjacent proprietor.” In Martin v. Riddle, reported in a note to Kauffman v. Griesemer, supra, it is said by Lowrie, J.: “ Where two fields adjoin, and one is lower than the other, the lower must necessarily be subject to all the natural flow of water *284from the upper one. The inconvenience arises from its position, and is usually more than compensated by other circumstances'; hence the owner of the lower ground has no right to erect embankments, whereby the natural now of the water from the upper ground shall be stopped; nor has the owner of the upper ground a right to make any excavations or drains, by which the flow of water is diverted from its natural channel, and a new channel made on the lower ground ; 'nor can he collect into one channel waters usually flowing off into his neighbor’s fields by several channels, and thus increase the waste upon the lower fields.” And in the case of Kauffmam v. Griesemer, Woodward, J., said : Almost the whole law of water-courses is founded in the maxim of the common law, Aqua eurrit, et debet ourrere. Because water is descendible by nature, the owner of a dominant or superior heritage has an easement in the servient or inferior tenement, for the discharge of all waters which by nature rise in, or flow or fall upon the superior.”

These parties, complainant and defendants, acquired the lands with full knowledge of their natural relations, and that from the one parcel, because of its altitude, and because water is in its nature descendible, the bursts of ' water from the creek in freshets, and the accumulations of rain water, had and found a natural outlet over the immediately adjacent lower lands. Whatever of advantage to the one, or of • inconvenience to the other, resulted from the natural formation of the lands, entered into the consideration of the acquisition ; and there can be no justice in suffering one party to increase his advantages, or to lessen his inconveniences, at the expense, and to the injury of the other. There can not be interminable contests between them as to the lessening or increasing the burdens nature has imposed. Either may improve his own parcel, so long as he keeps within a just application of the maxim, Sic utere tuo, ut Icedas non alienum. The demurrer to the bill was not well taken, and was properly overruled.

There is more of seeming than real conflict in the evidence. The principal facts are not. left in doubt or uncertainty. The inclination of the lands of the defendants is to the north-east, and to the south-west lie the lands of the complainant. The natural outlet for the water falling upon the lands of the complainant, and of the water originating thereon in the bursts of the creek in freshets, is over the lands of the defendants. These facts are uncontrovorted, and the owners of these lands have for a long time been endeavoring to lessen the injury to them resulting from the natural flow of the waters. The first embankment or levee which is complained of, styled in the pleadings and the evidence the ten-foot ditch,” has been constructed by the defendant across the natural channel and direc*285tion of these waters, extending for a distance of about seven hundred and fifty yards,retarding the natural flow of the water,raising it higher, and keeping it longer upon the lands of the complainant. We concur in the opinion of the chancellor, that the embankment or levee ought to be abated; that it is of continuous and constantly recurring injury to the complainant. As forming part of this embankment, must be included the embankment running north from the the hills, leaving the curve at the crossing of the running stream, as these objects are mentioned in the evidence, and indicated in the plat or map exhibited to the witnesses of the complainant. This embankment is not immediately connected with the longer one extending to the “sixteen-foot ditch.” But, like the longer one, is directly across the natural outlet of the waters, and according to its length is chargeable with a proportion of the injury to the lands of the complainant.

The evidence leaves it in uncertainty whether the defendants have changed the levee or embankment called the “ N. L. Brooks eight-foot ditch,” to an extent that is injurious to the complainant. That embankment was constructed more than ten years prior to the commencement of this suit. By analogy to the statute limiting actions for the recovery of lands to ten years, the continuous throwing back of the waters by this embankment for that period would create the presumption that it was rightful, barring legal and equitable remedies to redress the injury resulting from it.—Wright v. Moore, 38 Ala. 593. There being no material increase of the elevation of the embankment, no change of it disturbing the rights of the complainant, the present suit, so far as that embankment is matter of complaint, would fall within the bar of the statute. But, independent of that consideration, we can not say that the evidence discloses clearly that the embankment is of injury to the lands of the complainant.

No examination of the evidence is necessary to ascertain whether the husband of the complainant consented to, or approved the construction of these embankments. Such consent or approval would not legalize their construction and continuance, as against the complainant, working continuous injury to her lands.—Thomas v. James, 32 Ala. 723.

We find no error in the decree; and on each appeal, a judgment of affirmance must be entered.