This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Butler County increasing the damages awarded by the commissioners appointed by that court to assess benefits and damages to the lands and property in the Inter-River Drainage District.
The exceptors (respondents), as cotenants, own 118.95 acres in a body bounded on the northeast by the St. Francis River, which river is the eastern boundary of the drainage district. The contemplated levee runs along the southwest side of the river so as to bisect the lands of exceptors. The right of way for that levee includes 8.1 acres of the tract, leaving 30.95 acres outside of the right of way and between it and the river, and including 79.90 acres of the tract within the protection of the levee.
Exceptions were filed by respondents to the report of the commissioners assessing benefits and damages. A jury increased the net damages from $490 to $605.
The- district in that trial asked the following instruction, which was refused:
“The court further instructs you that even though you may find that the lands of exceptors are not now under present conditions flooded except when the St. ' Francis River reaches exceptionally high stages, and may further find that, after the completion of the works and improvements of the Inter-River Drainage District and the building of the St. Francis River Levee through *388the lands of exceptor, his said lands lying between said levee and the hank of the St. Francis River will be overflowed by the flood waters of said river more frequently and to a greater depth and for longer periods of time than they are now overflowed, still such additional overflows on said part of exceptors’ lands do not entitle him to recover damages from the drainage district therefor, and you will not take such facts and conditions into consideration in assessing the damages in this case.”
The court instructed the jury that the district was liable for such damages. There was evidence tending to show such increase in the height of the water outside the levee. It is conceded that such question is the only one here involved.
Water-6 Damages, Appellant contends that overflow water from a stream is surface water and that one proprietor of lands has the right to shut off such surface water from his land without being liable to another proprietor for ^Te damage thus caused. That rule must be conceded. [McCormick v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 433; Benson v. Railroad, 78 Mo. 504; Abbott v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 1. c. 280; Goll v. Railroad, 271 Mo. 655.]
But that rule does not help this appellant in the least. It is not the proprietor of one tract of land engaged in the act of shutting off the surface water from its tract, and thus keeping it back on the land of these respondents. This appellant does not own any land, nor any right of way for its levee. It is seeking to condemn such right of way over the land of respondents. In order to do that, it must comply with our State Constitution, Section 21 of Article 2, which says: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation.” 1 In State ex rel. v. Taylor, 224 Mo. 393 1. c. 482, it was said:
“In pursuance to that constitutional mandate, the Legislature duly enacted the drainage laws we now have under consideration. And whenever private property is about to be taken or damaged in consequence *389of said improvements, then in steps said Section 21 and says all damages done private property by means thereof shall be first paid.”
Appellant cites Jackson v. United States, 230 U. S. 1, and Hughes v. United States, 230 U. S. 24. In both those cases levees were constructed, but not on the lands of the complainants. Increased overflow of those lands was caused thereby. It was held that there could be no recovery. If the appellant were proceeding to build a levee leaving all of respondents’ land between the levee and the river, those cases would be in point. As it is, they do not apply.
Appellant is bold enough to cite Eldridge v. Trezevant, 160 U. S. 452, where is was held that in the State of Louisiana., in pursuance of the laws of that State, the land of an individual could be taken without compensation for the construction of a levee on the bank of the Mississippi. In that case it was said:
‘ ‘ The concession distinctly made by the complainant, in his bill, that the state courts refuse to recognize that owners of lands abutting on the Mississippi River and the bayous running to and from the same, where levees are necessary to confine the waters and to protect the inhabitants against inundation, are entitled, when a public levee is located upon such lands, to invoke the application of that provision of the state constitution which provides that ‘private property shall not be taken nor damaged for public use without just and adequate compensation first paid,’ and repeated in the brief filed on his behalf in this court, 'relieves us from an extended examination of the origin and history of the state enactments, constitutional and legislative, and of the decisions of the state courts on this subject.
“It is important, however, to observe the ground upon which the state legislative and'judicial authorities base their action. - That ground is found in the doctrine existing in the Territory of Louisiana before its purchase by the United States and continuing to this time, that lands abutting on the rivers and bayous are subject to a servitude in' favor of the public, whereby such portions *390thereof as are necessary for the purpose of making and repairing public levees may be taken, in pursuance of law, without compensation. This doctrine is said to have been derived from the Code Napoleon, whose 649th and 650th articles were as follows:
“ 'Servitudes established by law have for object the public or communal utility, or the utility of private persons. Those established for the public or communal utility have for object the two paths along the navigable or floatable rivers, the construction or repairing of roads and other public or communal works. All that concerns this kind' of servitude is determined by laws or particular regulations.’ ”
It is sufficient to say that we are proceeding under the law of Missouri, and not under that of the State of Louisiana. The difference in the laws of the two states is justified by the difference in the topography of their lands. We call attention to the fact that this appellant is not proceeding herein on the theory that it has a right to take without compensation therefor the lands of the respondents for the construction of a levee. If the law of Louisiana were in force in this State, as claimed by appellant, there would be no necessity for it to resort to this proceeding. It could take the right of way for the levee without payment therefor and without condemnation. The judgment is affirmed.
White, G., concurs.PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion of Roy, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All' of the judges concur.