Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Brinton

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE PAYNTER

Aefiemino.

The facts in this case are substantially as follows: The appellant's line of road runs east and west through the town of Pittsburg, alias Riley, -across which, running north and south, is a county road. At a point where the county road crosses the railroad, the appellant has constructed a fill two or three feet high. East of the -county road there is what is known in this record as Hays’ Storehouse, which stood at an elevation of about three feet from the ground, on wooden posts. In front of this storehouse there was a platform, and the part of it immediately adjoining the storehouse belonged to the proprietor of the storehouse, and the other part, next tio the railroad, belonged to it. The surface water of the boundary of land *184south of the railroad, at the point in question, flowed under the platform described; thence east, along the embankment of the railroad, passing through a culvert, and running in a northerly direction over the lands of the appellee, which does not seem to have damaged it. Debris of some kind seems: to have accumulated ait or near the point where the water flowed under the platform, causing the water to -accumulate against the railroad embankment. This continued for a time, when the railroad company-constructed a culvert under its road through which this water ,w-as. conducted along the side of the county road for some distance, when, from the want of a further outlet along- that side of the road, it forced its way across the county road, at which point the road seems to have a rock foundation, and on the property of the appellee, Brinton, resulting in the destruction of a fine spring, a tenement house, and damages to his place generally. The testimony tends to show that, subsequent to the construction of the culvert, the appellant removed its platform in front of the store, and also o.ne ihat it had on the west side of the county road, and filled the space with rocks .and screenings, thus effectually preventing the flow of the water along its embankment, and forced the Water which accumulated at that point from the way it had previously flowed into the culvert on the lands of the appellee. The trial resulted in a judgment against the appellant for $150, and no complaint seems to be made as to the reasonableness of the judgment, if the appellee is entitled to maintain his action.

The sole question presented here is whether the appellant had the right to construct the culvert, or artificial channel, and thus force the water to flow over appellee’s land, and produce the damage of which he complains. *185Counsel for appellant insists that tbe rule of tbe common, and not tbe civil, law prevails in this State in, reference to the use and disposition of surface water. Tbe question involved in tbe case of Stith v. Railroad Co. (opinion this day delivered), 58 S. W., 600, was as to tbe • right of the railroad company to construct a fill along its right of way, which caused the water to back upon and damage tbe upper proprietor. It was adjudged in that case that it could not do so without incurring liability for damages for tbe injury produced thereby. If counsel were correct in saying that tbe common-law rule bad prevailed in this State as to tbe use and disposition o.f surface water — as to tbe correctness of such assumption we do not decide — it does not now prevail as- to municipal and other corporations and individuals invested with the privilege of taking private property for public uses, as section 242 of the Constitution reads as follows: “Municipal and other corporations, and individuals invested with the privilege of taking private property for public use, shall make just compensation for property taken, injured or destroyed by them; which compensation shall be paid before such taking, or paid or secured, at the election of such corporation or individual, before such injury or destruction. . . ,n As we fully considered this section in Kemper v. City of Louisville, 14 Bush, 89, and Stith v. Railroad Co., it is not necessary to do so here.

The proof in this case tended to show' that the water which accumulated against the embankment of the appellant was surface water; that it would not have flowed from the point where it gathered on the land of the ap-pellee except for the artificial channel made by appellant. The act of the appellant, by placing rocks and screenings along the embankment, prevented the water from flowing *186where it'would naturally have gone. The embankment and the rocks and screenings caused the water to accumulate near the point where the culvert was constructed, and to carry it from that point on the land of the appellee the artificial channel was made. The mere fact that the county road may have accelerated the flow of part of the water which gathered at the point where it entered the culvert did not invest the appellant with the right to conduct all that did gather on the land of the appellee. Our opinion is that, under the rule of the civil and of the. common law, the appellant is liable for damages. However, if we were in error as to this', it would be immaterial, as it is clear that section 242 of the Constitution makes it liable. It is said in Gould, Waters, section 271: “An owner of land has no right to fid his land of surface water, or superficially percolating water, by collecting it in artificial channels, and discharging it through or upon the land of an adjoining proprietor. This is alike the rule of the common and civil law. . . .”

It is urged that as Riley, through whom the appellant obtained its right of way, at that time owned .the land, now owned by Brinton, being pE$rt of the track from which the right of way was taken, the railroad company had the right to build this embankment and culvert in the manner described; that, although the injury resulted by reason thereof, the appellee is in the same condition as would have been the original proprietor, and that the injury resulting was one for which no remedy exists. The deed is one which simply purports to convey the right of way to the appellant. There is nothing in it which, gives the appellant the right to make an unlawful use of the property conveyed by it. The vendor had the right to rely upon the fact that the railroad would be constructed *187so as not to damage him by its wrongful act. It did not confer upon the appellant the right to accumulate water and discharge it in an artificial channel on the remaining part of his land, and thus produce a serious damage. No such damage was in the contemplation of the parties at the time the deed was executed, neither does it relinquish a claim for damages for such an act. The judgment is affirmed.