Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PATNEEDI RUDRAYYA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VELUGUBANTLA VENKAYYA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1961
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1821 1962 SCR (1) 836
ACT:
Easements--Natural right of drainage--Rights of riparian
owner-If could impede natural flow of water--Phenomenon
happening from time immemorial--Meaning of--Indian Easement
Act, 1882 (5 of 1882), ss. 7, II.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents 1 and 2 constructed a bund on their own land
and dug trenches with a view to protect their lands from
being inundated by the flood waters of the Vakada drain; as
a result of that, the flood water flowing from appellant’s
field in the Northerly direction could not find an outlet
and stagnated on his land thus doing damage to his crops.
The appellant based the right of drainage in the Northerly
direction of all water falling on or invading his land
including flood water on immemorial user, and not on the
natural right of the owner of higher land to drain-off water
failing on his land on to lower lands. The Courts below
found inter alia that the inundation of the appellant’s land
was not unusual, abnormal or occasional but was. an event
which occurred every year in the usual course of nature, and
was a happening from time immemorial. The High Court came
to the conclusion that the flooding of the fields was not an
event recurring periodically from time immemorial but
something unusual and that water being a common enemy of
all, the defendants Nos. 1 and 2 were within their rights in
constructing the bunds and digging the trenches. The point
was whether a person had right to create an impediment in
the flow of water along its natural direction.
Held, that a ’phenomenon’ can be said to have been happening
from time immemorial if the date when it first occurred was
not within the memory of a man or was shrouded in the mist
of antiquity. Where the court upon the evidence available
was unable to fix the precise year of commencement of the
phenomenon, the proper inference would be that the
phenomenon had been known to occur from time immemorial.
Held, further, that the only right the riparian owner may
have, is to protect himself against extraordinary floods,
but even then he would not be entitled to impede the flow of
the stream along its natural course. When the owner of the
lower ground by creating an embankment impedes the natural
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flow of water he would be obstructing the natural outlet for
that water. It would make little difference that the water
happened to be not merely rain water, but flood water
provided the flood water was of a kind to which higher land
was subjected perodically.
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In the present case the bund erected and the trenches dug up
by the respondents 1 and 2 causing stagnation of flood water
constituted a wrongful act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
December 18, 1953, of the Madras High Court in Second Appeal
No. 24 of 1949.
K. Bhimasankaram and T. V. R. Tatachari, for the appellant.
K. R. Choudhri, for respondents Nos. 1 and 2.
1961. April 10. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUDHOLKAR, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment of the Madras High Court in a second appeal
reversing the decrees of the two courts below.
The plaintiff who is the appellant before us is the owner of
survey no. 159 of the village Vemulavada while defendants 1
and 2 are owners of survey no. 158 lying to the north of
survey no. 159 and adjoining. The defendant no. 3 is the
owner of a field lying to the north of survey no. 158. To
the south. of survey no. 159 is survey no. 160 belonging to
the brother of the plaintiff. Immediately beyond this field
and to the south are a "parallel drain", into which flow the
waters of the Vakada drain, and Tulyabhaga drain both
running west to east. It would appear that the parallel
drain is an artificial drain while the Tulyabhaga is a
natural drain. The parallel drain end,% abruptly at the
eastern end of survey no. 150 at a distance of about two
furlongs or so to the east of survey no. 160.
According to the plaintiff rain water falling on survey nos.
160 and 159 flows in the northern direction over survey no.
158 and then enters into a drain shown in the map and
indicated by the letters EE. In normal times the water in
this drain flows towards the south and empties itself in the
Tulyabhaga drain.
838
Sometime before the institution of the suit the defendants 1
and 2 constructed a bund running approximately east-west on
their own land. Its height, according to the Commissioner,
varies between 3 and 8 and its width is about 16’. Its
length is reported by the Commissioner to be 1580.
Apparently the bund is not a continuous one and there are a
few gaps in it. About 5 to the south of the bund the defen-
dants had dug several trenches 15’ in width and between 2’
and 4’ in depth. These trenches run along a foot-path which
separates the fields of the parties. The plaintiff’s
grievance is that as a result of what the defendants 1 and 2
have done flood water flowing from his field in the
northerly direction cannot find an outlet and stagnates on
his land thus doing damage to his crops. Further, according
to him as a result of the digging of the pits the level of
his land adjoining the footpath is gradually decreasing with
the result that the top soil of his field is being washed
away. He, therefore, sought a mandatory injunction
directing the defendants to fill up the trenches and
demolish the bunds raised by them. The plaintiff claims the
right of drainage of all water falling on or invading his
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land including flood water on the basis of immemorial user.
The defence of the first two defendants was that the land
actually slopes from north to south, that rain water and
flood water naturally flow from the north to the south and
that the plaintiff’s grievance is wholly imaginary. They
deny the existence of immemorial user upon which the
plaintiff rested his case. They admitted that flood waters
do stagnate on the plaintiff’s land. This, according to
them, was a result of the closing of some vents in the
Vakada drain by the ryots of that village as a result of
which the water collected in that drain during heavy rains
cannot find its natural outlet and floods the lands of a
number of people including the plaintiff’s. The bund
erected by the defendants was, according to them to protect
their lands from being inundated by the flood waters of the
Vakada drain and that it was open to the plaintiff to do
likewise by constructing dams at appropriate places
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in his field and thus keep back the flood waters of the
Vakada drain.
Both the courts below arrived at the following findings of
fact:
(1) The land dips in the northerly
direction.
(2) That a number of fields including
fields nos. 158, 159 and 160 lie in a sort of
a basin with elevations along the eastern and
western boundaries into which drainage and
rain water from all sides tends to accumulate.
(3) Ordinarily the surplus water from lands
adjacent to the basin as well as rain-water
falling on the land in the basin is drained
off from north and then finds its way in the
drainage channel EE which runs north-south and
drains it into the Tulyabhaga drain.
(4) Whenever due to heavy rain Tulyabhaga
drain is in spate the flood water which
collects in the basin cannot flow through the
channel EE and flows in the northerly
direction towards another channel called
Kongodu channel and that this is what has been
happening from time immemorial.
(5) Whenever there is heavy rain the Vakada
drain swells up and water therefrom floods
survey Nos. 153 to 160.
(6) That this has, been happening since time
immemorial and that the defendant’s contention
that this is because of something done in
recent times is not correct.
(7) That the inundation of the appellant’s
land in the further flow of water northwards
is not unusual, abnormal or occasional due to
extraordinary floods but is an event which
occurs every year in the usual course of
nature.
The High Court, however, came to the conclusion that the
flooding of fields Nos. 153 to 160 because of the swelling
of the Vakada drain is not something which has been
happening from time immemorial but only subsequent to the
year 1924, that the flooding of these lands was not a usual
and natural phenomenon but something unusual and that water
being a common enemy of all, the defendants 1 and 2 were
within
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their rights in constructing the bunds and digging trenches.
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According to the High Court the plaintiff had no right to
prevent the defendants from taking the steps that they are
taking and that a custom to allow flood water to flow over
the neighbour’s land has not been so far established.
We may mention here that the High Court had actually called
for certain additional findings from the appellate court and
one of the questions raised was whether there was an
immemorial user as contended by the plaintiff to let out
Vakada drainage water beyond certain points. In coming to
the conclusion that the plaintiff has not been able to
establish immemorial user in respect of the right claimed by
him of draining of flood waters from his field on to the
defendants the High Court has ignored the clear finding of
the lower appellate court on this point. We find that there
is no justification for the course adopted by the High
Court.
In para 17 of its judgment it has observed as follows:
"It is well established on the evidence that
from time immemorial flood water, as well as
the surplus water, and the water from Vakada
and Vemulavada, all collect and flow
northwards through the cradle or basin in
which the suit lands are situate, when the
level of the water in Tulyabbaga is such as
not to admit the flow of such water into it.
It has been customary from time immemorial for
the said water, under such circumstances, to
go northwards from the plaintiff’s fields
onwards over the defendants’ fields, and the
further fields beyond".
After remand the lower appellate court reiterated its
conclusion and observed as follows in para 14 of its
findings:
"On the evidence on record and for the reasons
I have given above I am of opinion that the
oral evidence either way is inadequate, but on
such little, evidence as available and on the
probabilities of the case and relying upon the
evidence of P. W. 4 and the clear indication
of the existence of local drain Exhibit P-4, I
would find that the Vakada drain
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water should have been getting into parallel
drain and through EE and F into Tulyabhaga
drain for a considerably long period of time,
at least from somewhere about the year 1920".
Earlier in its order the lower appellate court has observed:
"In my opinion the parallel drain should have
existed at least from the year 1924, if not
many
years before that".
It would thus be clear that even in the revised finding the
appellate court has not been able to fix the precise year of
commencement of the phenomenon. It would, therefore, follow
that upon the evidence available in this case the proper
inference to be drawn would be that this phenomenon has been
known from time immemorial. A phenomenon is said to be
happening from time immemorial when the date of its
commencement is not within the memory of man or the date of
its commencement is shrouded in the mists of antiquity. No
doubt the lower appellate court has referred to the years
1920 and 1924 in its finding but it has not said that the
phenomenon was observed for, the first time in 1924 or even
in 1920 It has made it quite clear that the phenomenon was
known to be happening in these years and that it must have
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been happening for many years prior to that.
The basis of the plaintiff’s claim is not the natural right
of the owner of higher land to drain off water falling on
his land on to lower lands but the basis is that this right
was being exercised with respect to the land of the
defendants 1 and 2 from time immemorial. The finding of
fact of the lower appellate court being in his favour on
this point his suit must succeed.
The High Court, following certain English decisions, came to
the conclusion that water being the common enemy, every
owner of land had a right to protect himself against it and
in particular to protect himself from the ravages of such
unusual phenomenon as floods. Some of the cases upon which
the High Court. has relied deal with the rights of riparian
owners and are thus not strictly appropriate.
106
842
The High Court seems to be of the opinion that the floods,
as a result of which the plaintiff and the defendants suffer
damage, are an unusual phenomenon. Here again, the High
Court has gone wrong because the lower appellate court has
found that these floods were a usual occurrence. Where a
right is based upon the illustration (1) to s. 7 of the
Indian Easements Act, 1882 (5 of 1882), the owner of higher
land can pass even flood water received by him on to the
lower land, at any rate where the flood is a usual or a
periodic occurrence in the locality. The High Court has
quoted a passage from Coulson and Forbes on Waters and Land
Drainage (1) and a passage from the judgment in Nield v.
London & North Western Railway (2) in support of its
conclusions. In the passage in Coulson & Forbes it is
stated that the owner of land must not take active steps to
turn the flood water on to his neighbor’s property. Here,
the dam erected by the defendants 1 and 2 stems flood waters
going from plaintiffs land down to the defendant’s land and
so the passage does not support the conclusion of the High
Court. The decision in Nield’s case (2) is further based on
the "common enemy" doctrine. In that case also there are
certain observations which would militate against the
conclusion of the High Court For instance: "where, indeed,
there is a natural outlet for natural water, no one has a
right for his own purposes to diminish it, and if he does so
he is, with some qualification perhaps, liable to any one
who is injured by his act, no matter where the water which
does the mischief came into the water course." Of course,
the court in that case was dealing with water flowing along
a natural water course. But the point is whether a person
has a right to create ail impediment in the flow of water
along its natural direction. Now the water on a higher
ground must by operation of the force of gravity flow on to
lower ground. Where the owner of the lower ground by
creating an embankment impedes the natural flow of water he
would be obstructing the natural outlet for that water. It
makes little difference that the water
(1) 6th Ed., p. 191.
(2) (1874) L.R. TO Ex 4.
843
happens to be not merely rain water but flood water provided
the flood is of the kind to which the higher land is
subjected periodically.
In England the early extension of the common drains all over
the country under the supervision of the Commissioners of
Sewers has rendered a discussion on the rights of flow of
surface water needless and, therefore, there are no modern
decisions upon the question. But old precedents show that
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the common law rule appears to be the same as that under
civil law. In a case arising in Guernsey (1) the Privy
Council has applied the rule of civil law to that island.
That this is adopted by the common law would appear from the
decision in Nelson v. Walker (2).
The rule of civil law according to Domat is quoted thus at
p. 2586 of Waters and Water Rights, Vol. III, by Farnham:
"If waters have their course regulated from
one ground to another, whether it be the
nature of the place, or by some regulation, or
by a title, or by an in ancient possession,
the proprietors of the said grounds cannot
innovate anything as to the ancient course of
the water. Thus, he who has the upper grounds
cannot change the course of the waters, either
by turning it some other way, or rendering it
more rapid, or making any other change in it
to the prejudice of the owner of the lower
grounds........... "
The learned author, after a discussion of old English cases
on the point, has stated that the common law regarded the
flow of rain water along natural courses as one of its
doctrines and that there is no general right thereunder to
fight surface water as a common enemy. The author has then
observed:
"All rightful acts with regard to it are
confined within very narrow limits which have
not yet been fully defined. And to state
generally that such water is a common enemy,
or that there is a right to fight it at common
law, cannot be otherwise than misleading". (p.
2590).
After discussing a number of precedents from the
(1) Gibbons v. Lenfestey A.K.I.R. 1915 P.C. 165.
(2) (1910) 10 C.L.R. 560.
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American State Courts he has pointed out that the common
enemy doctrine is of very recent origin he has observed at
p. 2591:
"That surface water is not a common enemy, and
that there is no right to fight it according
to the pleasure of the landowner, clearly
appear from the principles which have already
been stated."
We must, therefore, distinguish between cases pertaining to
riparian lands and cases like the present. But as pointed
out in Niela’s case (1) the only right which a riparian
owner may have is to protect himself against extraordinary
floods. But even then Jae would not be entitled to impede
the flow of the stream &long its natural course (2). We may
repeat that the finding here is that, the floods from which
the defendants 1 and 2 are seeking to protect themselves are
not of an extraordinary type. In the circumstances,
therefore, the bund erected by them and the trenches dug up
by them must be held to constitute a wrongful act entitling
the plaintiff to the reliefs claimed by him. For these
reasons we allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the
High Court and restore that of the subordinate judge. The
costs throughout will be borne by the defendants-
respondents.
Appeal allowed.
(1) (1874) L.R. 70 Ex- 4.
(2) Menzies v. Breadalbane, (1828) 3 Bhgh (N. S.) 414; 4
E.R.I. 387.
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