Duncan v. Board of Levee Commissioners
Duncan v. Board of Levee Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Section 238 of the constitution excludes compensation for damages accruing to land 1 ‘ because of its being left outside a levee ” — that is, damages inflicted upon the land by the Mississippi river, the ms major, the public enemy. “Left outside a levee ’ ’ presents the idea of defencelessness as against the ravages of the river — the land is ‘ ‘ left outside, ’ ’ left unprotected by the levee. The complementary clause of the section exempts the owner from levee taxes. The idea, the thought, of § 238, is that as the land “left outside a levee,” is to be without levee protection against the river, therefore, it shall not be taxed for levee purposes. All damages, therefore, which accrue to lands from the ravages of the river, because not protected against it by the levee, are not to be compensated for. But damages produced by independent causes, other than being left outside the levee, if in their nature allowable within the rules of law, are still recoverable. Take the case of land so situated — high at the river, with declination and drainage eastward — that the river rarely or never overflows it, and which yields annual crops of great value, yet such, also, in its topography, that were the levee built along its eastern base, rain water, which had theretofore been carried off through natural or artificial drains eastward, would be backed up over it, and destroy its crops. Manifestly this is not damage accruing because of the lands being left outside the levee, but because of the construction of the levee over lands of that situation and topographical character; damages caused, to put it otherwise, not because the lands were unprotected by the levee, but caused by the levee itself.
If the lands had been inside the levee and the declinations and drainage westward towards the levee, damages caused by the obstruction of such drainage would be recoverable, not be- . cause the lands were inside the levee, but because of such obstruction where and as it was produced. Whether inside or outside the levee, if the damage to the land is caused by the
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Stephen Duncan v. Board of Levee Commissioners
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Eminent Domain. Damages. Lcmd left outside a levee. Constitution 1890, £ 238. On a condemnation of land for levee purposes, the owner is not entitled, under § 238, constitution 1890, to damages because a part of his land is left outside of the levee; but is entitled to damage caused by the levee itself, such as the obstruction of drainage on land so situate.