A canal, constructed by the government to improve navigation,
overflowed intermittently, flooding the claimant's land but not
ousting him from his customary user, except for brief periods, or
inflicting permanent injury, and it did not appear either that the
flooding was intended or anticipated by the government or it
officers, or that it was attributable directly, in whole or in
part, to the improvement, rather than to natural conditions.
Held, that no taking could be implied, and the United
States was not liable
ex contractu. P.
264 U. S.
148.
55 Ct.Clms. 107 affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims dismissing a
petition.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
The main portion of the City of Stockton, Cal., and the adjacent
territory lie between the Calaveras River and the Mormon Slough,
both flowing in a general southwesterly direction. The streams are
several miles apart, and the intervening area, including
appellant's land, has always been subject to inundation by overflow
therefrom, as well as by reason of periodic heavy rainfall. During
periods of high water, sediment was deposited in large quantities
in the navigable channel, interfering with navigation and entailing
annual expenditures for dredging.
Page 264 U. S. 147
In view of this condition, Congress, in 1902, authorized the
construction above the city of a connecting canal by means of which
the waters of Mormon Slough were diverted into the Calaveras River.
Act June 13, 1902, 32 Stat. 368, c. 1079. The canal was constructed
in accordance with plans prepared by government engineers, after
investigation, upon a right of way procured by the State of
California and conveyed to the United States. A diversion dam was
placed in the slough immediately below the intake of the canal. The
excavated material was put on the lower side of the canal, making a
levee, of which the dam was practically a continuation, but that
this was not done with a view of casting flood waters upon the
upper lands is apparent, since the engineers believed the capacity
of the canal would prove sufficient under all circumstances. It was
evidently the most convenient method of disposing of the material,
and also it may have contributed to strengthen the lower bank
against erosion. The canal was completed in 1910. In January, 1911,
there was a flood of unprecedented severity, and there were
recurrent floods of less magnitude in subsequent years, except in
1912 and 1913. The capacity of the canal proved insufficient to
carry away the flood waters, which overflowed the lands of
appellant, lying above the canal, damaging and destroying crops and
trees, and injuring to some extent the land itself. Appellant
brought suit against the government to recover damages upon the
alleged theory of a taking of the property thus overflowed. The
land would have been flooded if the canal had not been constructed,
but to what extent does not appear. None of the land of appellant
was permanently flooded, nor was it overflowed for such a length of
time in any year as to prevent its use for agricultural purposes.
It was not shown, either directly or inferentially, that the
government or any of its officers, in the preparation of the plans
or in the construction of the canal, had any intention to thereby
flood any of the
Page 264 U. S. 148
land here involved, or had any reason to expect that such result
would follow. That the carrying capacity of the canal was
insufficient during periods of very heavy rains and extremely high
water was due to lack of accurate information in respect of the
conditions to be met at such times. The engineers who made the
examination and recommended the plans determined, upon the
information which they had, that the canal would have a capacity
considerably in excess of the requirements in this respect.
The Court of Claims concluded that none of the land here
involved had been taken within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution, and that therefore no recovery could be had
upon the theory of an implied contract, but that the liability
sought to be enforced was one sounding in tort, of which the court
had no jurisdiction. Accordingly, the petition was dismissed.
Beginning with
Pumpelly v. Green Bay
Co., 13 Wall. 166, this Court has had frequent
occasion to consider the question now presented. In that case, by
authority of the State of Wisconsin, a dam was constructed across
the Fox Fiver which had the effect of raising the ordinary water
level and overflowing plaintiff's land continuously from the time
of the completion of the dam in 1861 to the beginning of the action
in 1867, resulting in an almost complete destruction of the value
of the property. It was held that this constituted a taking in the
constitutional sense, and the rule was laid down (
80 U. S.
181):
"that, where real estate is actually invaded by superinduced
additions of water, earth, sand, or other material, or by having
any artificial structure placed on it, so as to effectually destroy
or impair its usefulness, it is a taking."
In
United States v. Lynah, 188 U.
S. 445,, a dam had been constructed by the United States
in such manner as to hinder the natural flow of a stream, and, as a
necessary result, to raise the level of its waters and overflow the
land of plaintiff to such an extent as to cause a total
Page 264 U. S. 149
destruction of its value. It was impossible to remove this
overflow of water, and the property, in consequence, had become an
irreclaimable bog, unfit for any agricultural use. It was held that
the property had been taken, and that the government was liable for
just compensation, upon payment of which the title and right of
possession would pass.
In
United States v. Cress, 243 U.
S. 316, the government, by means of a lock and dam, had
raised the water of the Cumberland River above its natural level,
so that lands not normally invaded were subjected permanently to
frequent overflows, impairing them to the extent of one-half their
value. A like improvement had raised the waters of the Kentucky
River in the same manner, so as to end the usefulness of a mill by
destroying the head of water necessary to run it. The findings made
it plain that it was not a case of temporary overflow or of
consequential injury, but a condition of "permanent liability to
intermittent but inevitably recurring overflows," and it was held
that such overflowing was a direct invasion, amounting to a
taking.
Under these decisions and those hereafter cited, in order to
create an enforceable liability against the government, it is at
least necessary that the overflow be the direct result of the
structure, and constitute an actual permanent invasion of the land
amounting to an appropriation of, and not merely an injury to, the
property. These conditions are not met in the present case. Prior
to the construction of the canal. the land had been subject to the
same periodical overflow. If the amount or severity thereof was
increased by reason of the canal, the extent of the increase is
purely conjectural. Appellant was not ousted, nor was his customary
use of the land prevented, unless for short periods of time. If
there was any permanent impairment of value, the extent of it does
not appear. It was not shown that the overflow was the
Page 264 U. S. 150
direct or necessary result of the structure, nor that it was
within the contemplation of or reasonably to be anticipated by the
government. If the case were one against a private individual, his
liability, if any, would be in tort. There is no remedy in such
case against the United States.
Keokuk Bridge Co. v. United
States, 260 U. S. 125.
The most that can be said is that there was probably some
increased flooding due to the canal, and that a greater injury may
have resulted than otherwise would have been the case. But, this
and all other matters aside, the injury was in its nature indirect
and consequential, for which no implied obligation on the part of
the government can arise.
See Gibson v. United States,
166 U. S. 269;
Bedford v. United States, 192 U.
S. 217;
Transportation Co. v. Chicago,
99 U. S. 635;
Jackson v. United States, 230 U. S.
1;
Horstmann v. United States, 257 U.
S. 138;
Coleman v. United States, 181 F.
599.
The judgment of the Court of Claims is
Affirmed.