Tiedeman v. Village of Middleton

Decision Date27 October 1964
Citation130 N.W.2d 783,25 Wis.2d 443
PartiesGeorge R. TIEDEMAN et al., Appellants, v. VILLAGE OF MIDDLETON, a municipal corporation, Respondent.
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court

Aberg, Bell, Blake & Metzner, Robert K. Aberg, Madison, for appellants.

Warren D. Lucas, Madison, Harold E. Hanson, Madison, of counsel, for respondent.

WILKIE, Justice.

Three issues are presented on this appeal:

1. Does the city of Middleton have the right to discharge surface water from the drainage area onto appellants' land?

2. Did appellants acquire a prescriptive right to the diversion of the surface water by the railroad embankment?

3. Are appellants entitled to injunctive relief in this situation?

First: Does the city of Middleton have the right to discharge surface water from the drainage area onto appellants' land? There are two possible theories under which the city could drain water on appellants' land: (1) Allowing the water to continue the direction of its natural flow, and (2) the power of a municipality to divert water incidental to construction of sewers or streets.

(1) Direction of Natural Flow.

Municipal corporations have the same rights in regard to surface waters as have individuals. 1 A municipality may, therefore, channel surface water in its natural direction via conduits rather than over the surface or by percolation if no new watershed is tapped and the volume of water is not increased. 2

The trial court found that with a minor exception, all the surface water from the whole drainage area (58 acres) would have drained naturally into the pond were it not for the railroad embankment. The exception was a half acre tract lying north of the tracks between Park and Maple streets. The court found that this small area would not have drained into the pond had it not been for the Middleton storm sewer system, but that the amount of water it contributed to the pond was negligible. Appellants assail these findings as being contrary to the evidence.

The trial court's findings of fact will not be disturbed unless they are against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. 3 If upon consideration of all the evidence, this court could reasonably arrive at the same conclusion, the finding below won't be upset. Appellants contend, and it is undisputed, that there are several depressions within the drainage area in which surface waters accumulate. All the water, then, does not ultimately end up in the pond. However, this literal construction of the finding flies in the face of common sense. The trial court certainly was aware that not only does water evaporate into the air and percolate into the ground, but that it ponds in low spots. The sum and substance of the finding is that all of the water in the drainage area which does drain, would find its way naturally to the pond if it were nor for the railroad embankment. The finding cannot be disturbed because there were a few ponding areas.

Appellants argue that the record is void of evidence proving that water from the drainage area would have reached the pond prior to the time the railroad embankment was laid. It is not surprising that neither side could produce a witness with first-hand knowledge of the water flow 100 years ago. Witnesses on both sides testified in essence that water in any part of the drainage area, with the one exception, would flow southerly toward the pond. Appellants' expert, Meklin, presented corroborating evidence in the form of land elevation readings. The elevation of the pond hovered around 910. The elevation of the swale, which lies between the trackes and the pond is 924.20. The elevations of various streets and corners within the drainage area are greater than those of the pond and the swale by the indicated amounts, respectively: Middleton and Hubbard (20 and 6 feet), Hubbard and Park (30 and 16 feet), Henry and South (21 and 8 feet), Park and South (25 and 11 feet), Mayflower and South (32 and 18 feet), Maple and South (30 and 16 feet), Elmwood (32 and 18 feet), Hubbard (28 and 14 feet), and South (20 and 6 feet). Would appellants have this court overrule the law of gravity and decide that water does not run down hill? It is true that these are 1960 readings. But due to the significant differences in elevation, the trial court could have reasonably relied on the readings in conjunction with the testimony to conclude that had the tracks not been there, the water would have flowed to the pond. The finding is not against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence.

Appellants also contend that a new watershed--the Anderson and Meadows developments--was tapped by the drainage system. The testimony and the elevation readings indicate that except for the small area, which was correctly determined to be of no import, the water from these developments always would have drained into the pond had it not been for the embankment.

Furthermore, the volume of water routed to appellants' land by the drainage system was not increased. The best evidence of this are the readings showing that the level of the pond did not rise significantly after the installation of the new culvert system. The elevation of the pond on August 22, 1960, was 909.66. After a 3.74 inch rainfall on September 18th, a 910.57 reading was taken. Readings on November 17th, January 17, 1961, and June 27, 1963, were 910.35, 910.08, and 908.96, respectively. The last water level reading was actually lower and the intervening levels not appreciably higher, than the first reading. Appellant Lemcke testified that the pond overflowed Park street about 60 years ago. The elevation of Park street, without the present grading, is nearly two and a half feet higher than the pond. Thus the depth of the pond was considerably higher before any draining system was established than it is now.

Appellants contend that the water north of the tracks is discharged from a 'natural reservoir' contrary to Pettigrew v. Village of Evansville. 4 The case is distinguishable. In Pettigrew a land owner complained that the city threatened to drain a large body of standing water, created by the active participation of the city, onto his land. The court stated, at page 230:

'* * * we know of no adjudged case where it has been held that the waters of a natural pond or reservoir upon the land of one person may be drained by him directly upon the land of another, greatly to his injury; nor where one owner has been allowed, by means of a ditch, trench, sewer or the like, to gather the surface water from his own land and throw it upon the land of another, so as materially to lessen its value and produce injury to the owner. * * *'

The important distinctions between Pettigrew and the case at bar are: (1) The water here would flow naturally to the adjoining land; (2) the water here was not in any standing or permanent body of water.

The facts of Pettigrew have been held to be 'exceptional.' 5 The facts in the instant situation are also clearly different from those in Pettigrew.

We conclude that under the facts presented here the city may divert the surface water under the 'natural flow' theory.

(2) Diersion Incidental to Construction.

Assuming that the 58-acre would not have drained naturally into the pond, what authority did Middleton have to divert surface water in conjunction with its program of street construction? It is undisputed that streets act as conduits in the Middleton drainage system. By constructing streets and gutters within its limits, a city may change the natural water course so as to increase the flow of water upon private land. 6 But a city may not collect water in a body and then cast it on the land in a large volume. 7 Appellants have no quarrel with the statement of the law, but argue that it is inapplicable here because none of their properties adjoin any of the streets of ditches utilized in the drainage system. Although appellant Voss's property abuts Middleton street, it is not adjacent to any of the streets employed as part of the drainage system. No water may be channeled to this land. However, Park street cuts through the property of appellants Tiedeman and Lemcke. As this street is a part of the system, water may be run off on their land.

We conclude, therefore, that incidental to its street construction, the city had additional authority to divert surface water to the land of appellants Tiedeman and Lemcke.

Second: Did appellants acquire a prescriptive right to the diversion of the surface water by the railroad embankment? Regardless of the city's right to establish its drainage system, appellants contend that because Middleton acquiesced when the railroad constructed its embankment back around 1855, which blocked off the natural flow of water from the 58-acre tract to the Tiedeman pond, the city is bound by that change and appellants acquired a prescriptive right in the maintenance of that embankment and that such right was violated by the piercing of the embankment by the culvert. 8

If an artificial body of water is created, land owners incidentally benefited are entitled to injunctive relief to prevent disturbance of the new state of the water. 9 Wisconsin prescriptive rights cases involve proprietors of lands which border bodies of water, who in some way relied on the new water level which was maintained by another's dam. 10 These cases hold that when the artificial level of the water is continued for a considerable period of time, usually twenty years, it becomes a natural condition. These cases do not control the present case. Appellants call the railroad grade, which blocked up the surface water the 'artificial condition.' In the Wisconsin prescriptive rights cases, the body of water affected--not the dam--constituted the 'artificial condition.' Also in these cases the land owners had made expenditures, constructed buildings, or in other...

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  • Shanak v. City of Waupaca
    • United States
    • Wisconsin Court of Appeals
    • May 19, 1994
    ...rain water collected and discharged through a pipe on adjoining land. However, the supreme court held in Tiedeman v. Village of Middleton, 25 Wis.2d 443, 449, 130 N.W.2d 783, 786 (1964) (footnotes omitted): "Municipal corporations have the same rights in regard to surface waters as have ind......
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