Bower v. . State

31 N.E. 894, 134 N.Y. 429, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 638, 89 Sickels 429, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1534
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 894 (Bower v. . State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bower v. . State, 31 N.E. 894, 134 N.Y. 429, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 638, 89 Sickels 429, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1534 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The case comes here for review by virtue of the statute, which provides that the party “ feeling aggrieved by the final award or final order of the board may appeal to the Court of Appeals upon questions of law only, arising upon the hearing of the claim, or upon the excess or insufficiency of such award or order. The Court of Appeals shall hear such appeal and affirm, reverse or modify such award or order, or dismiss such appeal, or award a new hearing before the Board *431 of Claims, as justice may require.” (L. 1883, ch. 205, § 10, as amended by L. 1881, ch. 501, § 1.) And that “the practice upon the hearing of appeals in the Court of Appeals from the final order or award of the board shall conform, as near as may be, to the practice prevailing upon appeals from the courts of record of the state.” (L. 1883, ch. 205, § 11, as amended by L. 1884, ch. 60, § 1.)

The restriction by the statute of the review to questions of law' is in accordance with the practice of this court on appeals from judgments in civil actions, and consequently Avhen there is a conflict of evidence or any evidence to support the determination of the board the question of fact thus presented is not the subject of review.

It is urged by the learned counsel for the claimant that the evidence required the board to find a state of facts which entitled him to an award of damages; and, therefore, the exceptions to its findings and to its refusal to find as requested were well taken. The fact is established that by the flooding of Bower’s land situated near the head of Seneca lake in the xnllage of Watkins, it was to quite an extent unfitted for profitable cultivation during the period in question. And to enable persons owning lands there to seek relief for such injuries as were occasioned by the state dam at Waterloo, it was provided by Oh. 345, L. 1885, that the Board of Claims was authorized “ to hear, audit and determine the claims for damages of persons owning real property adjacent to or bordering upon Seueca lake, or its inlets in said state, by reason of the overflow of water caused by the state dam at Waterloo and the flush boards kept thereon within six years immediately preceding the filing of such claims with said Board of Claims.”

It is apparent that the purpose of this statute was to permit the persons coming within its provisions to obtain from the state relief for the damages so far as they were attributable to the maintenance of the dam and flush boards. And the question presented for determination by the Board of Claims was Avhether or not the claimant had suffered any and what damages from that cause, and that was dependent upon the fact *432 whether the dam had the effect to raise the water in the lake essentially above its natural level. The finding of the board that it did not is challenged by the claimant. A dam had been in the Seneca outlet at or about the same place for upwards of seventy years at the time the claim was filed, and had been maintained by the state about sixty years. It does not appear by the evidence what was the condition of the land at and near the head of the lake at the time the dam was first constructed by the Seneca Navigation Company. But it does appear that quite a large tract, including that of the claimant, has been known as marsh lands, through which passes the inlet of the lake. Since the state succeeded to the rights of the navigation company, its purpose, as indicated by the course of legislation in providing for the maintenance of the dam and the use of the outlet for the canal, has been not to raise the water in the lake above its natural level. The authority given to the canal commissioners was to so construct the works as to reduce the water in the canal two feet below its natural level by deepening it at Waterloo and in the outlet of the lake. (L. 1828, ch. 290); and to reduce the waters of the lake to the level of the water in the outlet at a point half a mile below the foot of the lake. (L. 1829, ch. 360.)

Later the commissioners were authorized to lower the lake level of the canal one foot and secure four feet depth of water in it by removing obstructions at the head of the outlet and enlarging the channel so as to extend the lake level to Waterloo. (L. 1844, ch. 313.) It appears by the public canal records that pursuant to this 'act of 1844 improvements were made, which, it is claimed, had the effect to reduce the low-water stage of the lake about one foot. This seems to be matter of deduction not otherwise very clearly appearing by the record here. In 1854, provision was made for the enlargement of this and the Erie and Oswego canals (Oh. 16). Before this enlargement was completed, the canal commissioners, were authorized in doing it to excavate the Seneca river and the canal from near Waterloo into the lake to the depth of nine feet and of the width not exceeding that required by law for *433 the enlargement of the canal. (L. 1857, ch. 479.) And by that act, it was further provided that nothing in it should “ be so construed as to authorize or permit ” the dam to be raised above its then height. The enlargement seems to have been completed in 1861.

The canal commissioners were afterwards authorized to raise and maintain the dam not exceeding its original height, but so as not to raise the waters of the lake above their natural height; and it was provided that no claim should be entertained for any damages to land or property by reason of restoring the dam to its original height. (L. 1867, ch. 752.)

The channel was deepened nine feet a portion and seven feet the rest of the way from the lake to Waterloo, and it was widened. But nothing was done by way of raising the dam, pursuant to the act of 1867, until the fall of 1884, when it was rebuilt. In the meantime in an act making appropriation for its reconstruction it was provided that the dam should be sufficient to restore and maintain the waters of the lake, but not above their original height. (L. 1872, ch. 343.)

Thus appears the legislative purpose to not raise the natural level of the lake. And how well that policy was observed in practical effect as the dam was maintained was a question before the Board of Claims. It is represented by the public records relating to the canal that the dam of 1828 was two feel lower than that of the Seneca Navigation Company, and no evidence appears to the contrary in the record here. And it may be inferred that, subject to the limitation in respect to the natural level of the lake, the provisions for raising it was in reference to the height of the original dam which the state found there when it took the rights of the navigation company. The dam which was constructed in 1841 was made four feet and eight inches in height, notwithstanding the plan and direction of the engineer that it be made four feet high. This it seems was thereafter the only dam there until the new one was constructed in 1884. The comparative height of those two dams was the subject of conflict in the evidence. While that on the part of the claimant was that the new dam was a *434 foot higher than the old one, there is evidence that it was only one-half an inch higher, and that there was only one-fourth of an inch difference in the height of the flush boards upon them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Slocum v. Northwestern National Life Insurance
115 N.W. 796 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 894, 134 N.Y. 429, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 638, 89 Sickels 429, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bower-v-state-ny-1892.