Appellant, plaintiff below, filed bill of complaint in the circuit court of St. Lucie County, alleging that he is the owner of certain property bordering on Indian River; that defendants own land adjacent to his; that a certain ditch forming a natural watercourse originates on the land of defendant LeTourneau and runs through defendant Denison's land, then through plaintiff's land and into Indian River; that in its natural state this ditch served the needs of all the parties adjacent thereto; that defendants have caused the ditch to be deepend so that now large and unusual quantities of water flow into said ditch; that *Page 102 at times the ditch overflows causing serious damage to plaintiff's truck crops; and that much of his soil is being washed and carried away by the excess water now flowing through the ditch. Plaintiff also alleges that he has twice built dams on the ditch to hold the water off his property and that each time defendants have come upon his land and torn down and destroyed such dams, causing irreparable injury to plaintiff's land and crops.
A temporary restraining order was issued preventing defendants from destroying a dam now across the ditch. Plaintiff alleged in his amended bill of complaint that by reason of the deepening of the watercourse "* * * the water table in what is known as the savannah, which is westerly of the said lands of all of the parties has been, and is continuing to be so lowered, that by seepage, filtration, percolation, or otherwise, large and unusual quantities ofsurface water have been caused to be drained, seeped filtered and percolated into said stream * * *." (Emphasis supplied.) On motion, the amended bill was dismissed and judgment entered thereon. Plaintiff appeals.
If the owners of the upper estate have the right to deepen the ditch for the protection and improvement of their lands, then the dismissal was correctly granted. The authorities on this point are by no means of one accord. However, in Door v. Simmerson (1905),
In a later case, San Gabriel Valley Country Club v. Los Angeles County, 182. Cal. 392,
"Summing up the discussion, our conclusion, as we have stated, is that an improvement for the purposes of the drainage and protection of lands above does not give a lower riparian owner on the stream a cause of action, merely because such improvement increases the volume of water in the stream as it comes to his land, even though the burden he is necessarily under of protecting his land against the stream is thereby increased, and his land is injured because of his failure to meet such increased burden, and further, that the rule is not subject to the limitation that the increased volume must not be such as to make the stream exceed the capacity of its channel."
In American Sand and Gravel Co. v. Rushing, (Ala.)
In his brief plaintiff discussed at length the law relative to percolating and subterranean waters, but the allegations in his bill of complaint only to percolations, etc., ofsurface waters, Defendants had a right to deepen the ditch to provide drainage for their land, and the amended bill of complaint was properly dismissed. For entering upon plaintiff's land and tearing down his dams built for the protection of his own lands, there is an adequate remedy at law. *Page 104
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
WHITFIELD, P. J., and BROWN and CHAPMAN, J. J., concur.
TERRELL, C. J., concurs in opinion and judgment.
JUSTICE, BUFORD not participating as authorized by Section 4687, Compiled General Laws of 1927, and Rule 21-A of the Rules of this Court.
THOMAS, J., disqualified.