La Fleur v. Kolda

Decision Date06 May 1946
Docket Number8811.
PartiesLA FLEUR et al. v. KOLDA et al.
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court

Rehearing Denied June 24, 1946.

Alan Bogue and Everett A. Bogue, both Vermillion for appellants.

Lars A. Bruce, State's Atty., of Yankton, for respondents Frank W. Smith and Yankton County, S. D.

H A. Doyle and Frank Biegelmeier, both of Yankton, for respondents Frank B. Kolda, Charles Mikolasek, and Stanley Mikolasek.

PER CURIAM.

The plaintiffs seek to enjoin the maintenance of ditches in the highway through which surface waters are drained from a basin or pond located on the highway and on the properties of two of the individual defendants into a larger basin or pond located in part upon the property of one of the plaintiffs. The trial court entered judgment for defendants and plaintiffs have appealed.

The properties described by the evidence are on opposite sides of a north and south highway in Yankton County. At the north on the east side of the highway is a quarter owned by defendant Frank Kolda. Immediately south of the Kolda quarter is a quarter owned by one Albert Mueller, a brother of the plaintiffs. Immediately south of the Albert Mueller quarter is an 80-acre tract owned by plaintiff LaFleur. On the west side of the highway and immediately west of the Kolda quarter is a quarter owned by defendant Charley Mikolasek. Immediately south of that quarter is a quarter owned by one Wm. J. Fantle. Immediately south of the Fantle quarter is a quarter owned by one Jake Bierle. The slope of the entire area is toward the south or slightly east of south.

The drainage of which plaintiffs complain is of a basin of about 10 acres located on the properties of the defendants Mikolasek and Kolda. This basin is bisected by the highway. For convenience we will refer to it as the Kolda pond.

A second basin or pond of about 15 acres is located just southwest of the Kolda basin in the northwest corner of the Fantle quarter. It will be referred to as the Fantle pond.

A third basin of upwards of 40 acres is located at the four corners of the properties of Fantle, Albert Mueller, Bierle, and plaintiff LaFleur. Approximately 15 acres of this lake is on the northwest corner of the plaintiff LaFleur 80. It is known as the north Mueller pond. This pond receives the drainage about which plaintiffs complain.

A fourth basin of about 15 acres is located just south of the last described basin and is wholly upon the property of plaintiff LaFleur. It receives drainage by seepage from the north Mueller pond. It is known as the south Mueller pond.

These ponds are all of the same character. In periods of heavy precipitation they are full, and at other times they are dry and produce hay. The Mueller ponds have no outlet.

Prior to 1930 north and south traffic followed a trail around to the west of the Kolda pond on the Mikolasek property. A request was made of the county for a graded road along the section line. Those in authority considered two types of grade, viz., (1) a grade above any probable water level; (2) a lower grade protected from water by adequate drainage ditches. To secure the benefits of the drainage and to assure the building of the desired highway defendants Kolda and Mikolasek each contributed $100 to the second type of construction. The grade with a substantial drainage ditch, 3 to 3 1/2 feet in depth, on each side thereof, was constructed in 1930.

In its natural state there was no break in the rim of the Kolda pond. Although the area as a whole sloped to the south, the ground immediately to the south of this basin was 3 to 4 feet higher than its bottom. Only one witness testified that he had seen it overflow. There was some drainage from it by seepage to the south. The described ditches cut through the south rim of this basin and drained water therefrom which could only have escaped by percolation or seepage. The water so drained was carried down the highway into the Fantle basin, and through that basin to the southeast into the north Mueller pond.

The trial court in substance found that the ditches were located on the lands of the defendants Mikolasek and Kolda; that they followed the natural course of drainage for the basin and the area; and that they discharged the surface waters into a natural depression or water course. In addition, the court found or concluded 'that this watershed is surrounded by a rim of hills or much higher land and the said north Mueller lake is the receptacle designated by nature as a final resting place for the surplus water in said watershed'. All of these findings are assailed by plaintiffs. For the purposes of this opinion, and without detailing the evidence, we assume they are sufficiently supported by the evidence. The point we are to consider is whether in such circumstances the property of plaintiff LaFleur is burdened with a natural servitude to receive the described waters from the Kolda basin.

The drainage is by the county for highway purposes. The right to drain such a pond over or onto lower property of another, without compensation for the privilege, is the same whether the upper land is the farm of an individual or a public highway. Graham v. Keene, 143 Ill. 425, 32 N.E. 180; II Farnham, Water and Water Rights, § 186; 27 R.C.L. 1155. Therefore, we deal with the issue as though the ditches were installed and maintained by the defendants Kolda and Mikolasek.

This jurisdiction is committed to the principle that lower property is burdened with a natural servitude to receive surface waters from upper property, through such channels as nature has provided, and to the further principle that in the reasonable use of his property the upper owner may artificially drain the same of surface waters along the general course of natural drainage for the area drained, by constructing open or covered drains discharging the water on his own property into some natural watercourse or into a natural depression whereby the water will be carried into some natural watercourse across the servient premises, and such drains may hasten or increase the natural flow of surface water by cutting the rim of a pond or basin. SDC 61.1031. Thompson v. Andrews, 39 S.D. 477, 165 N.W. 9; Johnson v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., S.D., 22 N.W.2d 737.

The foregoing principles were rationalized in Thompson v. Andrews, supra, as follows [39 S.D. 477, 165 N.W. 12]: 'The rights acquired and the burdens undertaken by those who settle upon or purchase lands in a particular locality are such rights and burdens as are consonant with the just rights and burdens of those people who may become possessed of other lands in same locality. These rights and burdens must, from the very nature of things, depend upon the purposes for which nature has apparently fitted and intended such lands. Nothing is better settled than that the law of easements is founded upon nature's laws and nature's works. We must therefore ask what rights and burdens, consonant with good neighborliness and with the reasonable furtherance of husbandry, should be held to attach to our agricultural lands? Certainly every person who acquires lands normally fitted for cultivation should have the right to render them permanently fitted therefor if he can do so without injustice to another; therefore one who acquires lands, over which a water course passes through which upper lands normally dry can be drained in accordance with 'the general course of natural drainage,' should be held to have acquired same knowing that good neighborliness and the common welfare required him to permit of the drainage of such upper lands through such water course conditioned only that such drainage be accomplished without unreasonable injury to his land.'

The express words of the opinion in Mishler v. Peterson, 40 S.D. 183, 166 N.W. 640, extended the right of artificial drainage of surface water so as to permit the owner of the upper dominant property to drain a land-locked basin located on his property into a land-locked basin on the servient property, by constructing drains wholly upon...

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