Mindnich v. Kline
Mindnich v. Kline
Opinion of the Court
This was a suit brought by the appellees against the appellants for damages because of the construction of two certain dams in the Little Wabash river, for the abatement of the obstructions, and for a decree perpetually enjoining the appellants from so obstructing the river.
The facts are shown by special findings. Appellee Mary E. Kline was the owner in fee simple of certain described real estate in Huntington county, being 107 acres bordering the south side of said river, less than one-half mile above, or up the stream from, the lands of the appellants hereinafter mentioned. Appellee Bridget Roche was the owner in fee simple of certain other lands, being eighty acres bordering the south side of the river, likewise less than one-half mile above the lands of the appellants. Erom time immemorial the Little Wabash river has been, and it still is, a natural watercourse, extending from a point five or six miles southwest of the city of Ft. Wayne, Allen county, in a southwesterly direction through that county and Huntington county, and along and through the
The appellants are the owners of certain lands lying on the north and south sides of the river, and extending across it, and including an island below the lands of the appellees. The island is located in the river opposite the other lands of the appellants, and is about fifty yards wide and one hundred and fifty yards long. At the island the channel of the river divides into a south branch and a north branch, the former channel being about seventy-five feet wide, running along the south side of the island, and the north branch being a channel about thirty feet wide, running along the north side of the island. Erom time immemorial both of these branches have been, and they now are, natural watercourses, and parts of the river, with natural and well-defined channels' and beds and banks, and necessary to hold, contain and convey the water which naturally flows in the river and passes at that place.
July 1, 1883, one Branstrater and others filed in the Superior Court of Allen County a petition, under the drainage laws of this State, for the location and construe
The judgment of the Superior Court of Allen County does not limit the river to said artificial ditch, but “it was the intention of said court that said old channel above and below said island should be left open and unobstructed, and that all of said old channel on the south side of said island should remain open and unobstructed and as a part of said river; and that the object of said proceedings in said court was to enlarge said river at said island and at other points above and below the same.” The lands of the appellees and of the appellants were assessed for the construction of said artificial ditch. For several years after the construction of the artificial ditch the old channel on the south side
After the construction of the artificial ditch, appellant Mindnich became the owner of the island and the other land to the north and south of it bordering on the river, and thereafter he opened up a stone-quarry in the river, in the bed of the channel south of the island and opposite the lower end thereof. He also entered the river and constructed a permanent dam across the south channel at the east or upper end of the island and at the west or lower end thereof. These dams were constructed of stone, dirt and other material; the upper one extending from the upper end of the island to the south bank of the river, a distance of about seventy-five or eighty feet, and being from six to seven feet high and completely. closing up the south channel, so that the natural flow of the water of the river cannot pass through that channel, and the lower one extending from the lower end of the island to the south bank of the river, and both of the dams are as high as the baúles of the river at said points. The dams were constructed by Mind-: nich for the purpose of keeping out of the south channel water that would naturally pass through it, and of preventing such water from passing through it, in order that he might operate the stone-quarry in the bed of the river.
Afterward the other appellant, the Huntington Consolidated Lime Company, purchased an interest in the stone-quarry and the land above mentioned, and both of the appellants have since been maintaining, and from time to time enlarging, the dams. By the construction and maintenance of the dams the appellants have reduced and taken away one-half of the size of the natural capacity of the river at the’island. The artificial ditch on the north side of the island is wholly insufficient to hold and to carry the water which must pass at that point. The dams obstruct, greatly impede and cheek the natural flow of the water
The court’s conclusions seem so satisfactory and necessary, as being in accordance with principles firmly established and well understood, that there would be no occasion for discussion but for the claim on the part of the appellants that, as a result of the proceedings and judgment in the drainage proceedings in the Superior Court of Allen County, the south channel closed up by dams should be regarded as no longer being a portion of the river, and that the intervening space between the island and south shore of the river, inclosed between the two dams, should be
Certainly, it appears from the findings that the dams were erected in and across a place where the river had immemorially flowed as a natural watercourse, and the drainage proceedings shown in the findings do not appear therein to have changed the character of the place as a channel of such a stream and part of a river, whose waters the appellants had no right, by their obstructions, to cause to overflow the lands of the upper proprietors. Those proceedings, as appearing in the special findings, constituted no sufficient defense for the acts of the appellants shown by the findings.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.