Adirondack Power & Light Corp. v. City of Little Falls

148 Misc. 191, 265 N.Y.S. 567, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1829
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 148 Misc. 191 (Adirondack Power & Light Corp. v. City of Little Falls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adirondack Power & Light Corp. v. City of Little Falls, 148 Misc. 191, 265 N.Y.S. 567, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1829 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Smith, Edward N., J.

The action is brought by the plaintiffs, The Adirondack Power and Light Corporation and Daniel Green Felt Shoe Company, against the defendant the city of Little Falls, for an injunction restraining it from diverting the waters of tributaries of East Canada creek from the catchment area thereof to said city for its municipal water supply, and for damages caused said plaintiffs at their several water power plants by such diversion for a period commencing six years prior to the commencement of this action, or from February 1, 1917.

The East Canada creek empties into the Mohawk river some six and one-half miles easterly of the city of Little Falls; its sources are in the Adirondack Mountains; it has a catchment area of 257 square miles at Dolgeville, N. Y., of 278 square miles at the Ingham’s Mills plant of the plaintiff The Adirondack Power and Light Corporation, and of 282 square miles at the Beardslee Falls plant of said corporation; its mean flow is about 600 cubic feet per second, as appears from the official records of stream flow taken at Dolgeville each day for a period of nineteen years; it is what is known as a flashy ” stream, with a rapid run off. The mean daily flow for the nineteen-year period fluctuates from 234 cubic feet per second in August to 1,883 cubic feet per second in' April. The months of [194]*194heavy flow are the months of March, 951 cubic feet per second; April, 1,883 cubic feet per second, and May, 703 cubic feet per second. No other month excepting December reaches a flow above 500 cubic feet per second; and, excluding the months of March, April and May, the mean flow is 408.8 cubic feet per second.

One of the principal tributaries of East Canada creek is Spruce creek, which empties into it a short distance above the village of Dolgeville. Spruce creek at its junction with East Canada creek has a catchment area of 52 square miles, and at what is known herein as Eaton pond dam has a catchment area of 36.2 square miles, or, as agreed, one-seventh of the catchment area of East Canada creek at Dolgeville. The mean flow at Eaton pond dam is 83.9 cubic feet per second.

Beaver brook is a tributary of Spruce creek and has a catchment area above the dam erected by the defendant city of 5.1 square miles. Tributary are two springs, known as King’s springs, which have a flow of between 400,000 and 1,000,000 gallons per day, which in a state of nature entered said brook below said dam.

In or about the year 1888 the defendant city (then village) of Little Falls entered upon a project for the acquisition of a municipal water supply, and on Beaver brook, at a point above the junction of the King’s springs flow with it, purchased some land, built a small dam six feet high, with an impounding area of 60 feet by 120 feet, and built a pipe line running therefrom a distance of some nine miles to a distributing reservoir located on the heights above the village, through which pipe it drew the water of Beaver creek to its distributing reservoir from which the municipality and its inhabitants are supplied with water. The capacity of the pipe line, as originally constructed, was 3,000,000 gallons of water per day. In the year 1897 or 1898 it connected its pipe line with Spruce creek at Eaton pond dam site, where it constructed a concrete dam and a filter bed, the latter having been completed in the year 1899. Later, and in about the year 1908, it connected with its pipe line the flow from the King’s springs. In the year 1907 there were certain structural changes made in the pipe fine, the result of which was that the capacity of the line was increased so that it since then delivers to the distributing reservoir 4,100,000 gallons of water per day, which it has been agreed upon has been the amount of diversion during all the period involved in this action. This amounts to 1,496,500,000 gallons per annum, or to 6.3 cubic feet per second. This is a trifling quantity of water, and were it not for the tremendous head at which the waters of East Canada creek are used by The Adirondack Power and Light Corporation at its hydro-electric plants thereon, as will hereafter appear, might be considered de minimis; [195]*195but when converted into horse power at the heads at which it can be used if available, this amount of diversion causes a very considerable damage to the plaintiff The Adirondack Power and Light Corporation. It is to restrain this diversion and to recover damages on account thereof that this action is brought.

Neither the defendant city nor its predecessor village of Little Falls had and never claimed that it had any right without condemnation or grant to divert the waters of East Canada creek from its natural catchment area. Every riparian owner has the right to have the water of a stream flow past his premises in the stream as it is wont to flow, without diminution and without increase of the natural flow or obstruction thereto; this of course subject to the use of water by those above for domestic purposes, for the use of cattle, and for the proper use, within limits as to obstruction of flow, for power purposes. Of course the defendant the city of Little Falls and its predecessor had a paramount right through condemnation to acquire the right to the use of water for municipal water supply, upon paying fair compensation to those who might be injured by the diversion of the water for municipal purposes; it at no time has had any other conception of its rights.

The defendant city has acquired no right by prescription. There is no possible basis here for the presumption of a grant. The whole conduct of the city, as shown by its own municipal records (its institution of condemnation proceedings never completed, its filing of maps of its plans in the Herkimer county clerk’s office, its acquisition from time to time by grant of rights to divert from a few of the many riparian owners, its recognition from the very beginning that any diversion must be compensated for by storage reservoirs), negatives any such presumption or any adverse claim of right. Its much-advertised purpose to construct adequate reservoirs and its actual conduct in that respect may have had the effect of lulling to sleep riparian owners who in the event of such construction would be actually benefited and suffer no damage by reason of the diversion for municipal water supply.

The original plans for its water works system, including the supply, were prepared under the supervision of or by a very able hydraulic engineer, Stephen E. Babcock, now deceased, who was or became the engineer for the city. His plan was based upon the proposition that by storing up, by storage reservoirs, storm or flood waters there would be impounded waters from waste or useless waters sufficient in amount to compensate for the draft for the uses of the village; that under those circumstances the diversion of the water would cause no damage, but that by storage reservoirs actual benefit, through the holding back of the waters during the flood water period, [196]*196would accrue to the riparian owners. From time to time the defendant city of Little Falls has prepared for, but has never prosecuted to the end, condemnation proceedings; on the contrary, as occasion has arisen, it has from time to time acquired by purchase from riparian owners rights of diversion and contracted to construct and maintain storage reservoirs. It has apparently followed a line of least resistance.

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Bluebook (online)
148 Misc. 191, 265 N.Y.S. 567, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adirondack-power-light-corp-v-city-of-little-falls-nysupct-1930.