Boyer v. Village of Little Falls

5 A.D. 1, 38 N.Y.S. 1114
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 A.D. 1 (Boyer v. Village of Little Falls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyer v. Village of Little Falls, 5 A.D. 1, 38 N.Y.S. 1114 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Ward, J.:

The plaintiff in her complaint alleged she was the owner of certain springs of water situate in and near the village of Little Falls, and a system of water works leading from said springs into the said village, consisting of logs and other conduits and penstocks by which the inhabitants of Little Falls, or a large portion thereof, were [3]*3supplied by the plaintiff with pure, wholesome water from said springs, and from which she derived a large revenue, in the sum of about $1,200 annually ; that on or about the 1st day of May, 188'f, the'defendant by its agents wrongfully and unlawfully took up and destroyed said logs and other conduits, cut off said penstocks and removed the same, and wholly destroyed the said system of water works and the value of the use of said springs, to the great damage of the plaintiff; that the defendant was a municipal corporation, organized under the laws of this State.

The defendant answered, denying the allegations in the complaint, except that of.its incorporation, and alleged that in the beginning of the year 1886 it commenced, within its corporate limits, the construction of a system of water works, and continued such construction during said year and the three years following; that in constructing said system of water works it became necessary to remove any and all obstructions found in defendant’s streets, in order that the work of laying the mains, conduits and pipes constituting said system might be properly and efficiently done; that it had been duly, granted a franchise for that purpose by the Legislature of the State; and that the plaintiff was never granted any right to construct the system of water works set out in her complaint by the defendant, or any party of competent jurisdiction having the right to confer the same.

The action was commenced in March, 1890, and was referred to a re feree for trial, who, after a patient hearing, found that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from defendant damages to the amount of $1,400, with interest from August 1, 1888. Upon the trial, after the plaintiff had given her evidence, and the defendant had sworn a single witness, the parties rested and announced the evidence as closed, with right to submit briefs on either side. The defendant moved for a nonsuit for several reasons, which was denied. Soon thereafter the defendant, upon affidavits, moved to reopen the case before the referee to give further testimony, which motion the referee decided to grant conditionally. He allowed the case to be reopened, so as to permit the defendant to offer additional evidence upon the value of the plaintiff’s system of water works, and to show that the interference of the defendant with those works did, not take place earlier than 1888, and that the plaintiff’s.pump-logs [4]*4were rotten or defective; that the defendant had put in a system of water works in the village, and that the customers of plaintiffs system ceased to be such and became customers of the defendant, and that the defendant was not responsible for the acts of the persons who destroyed the plaintiff’s system. Considerable proof was given under this permission.

The referee in his decision made findings of -fact and law; the second finding of fact states that in 1805 William Alexander and others formed themselves into a voluntary association for the purpose of supplying themselves and others with water from a spring which was located at the eastern part of the village of Little Falls, by means of wooden conduits known as pump logs, and proceeded to introduce a system of' water supply, lie finds further that in 1806 the Legislature passed an act, being chapter 45 of the laws of that year, entitled an act “ To incorporate an aqueduct association in the village of Little Falls, in the county of Iierkimer,” and created the said William Alexander and "others a body politic with the power to enter upon and make use of lands for the purpose of- conducting a supply of water to and through the village of Little Falls, provided the consent was obtained from the jiersons through or over which pipes or aqueducts might, pass ; that this corporation organized, appointed its officers and enacted by-laws, adopted a seal, issued scrip certificates of stock, held stated meetings, and kept regular minutes of its meetings up to 1851; that prior to 1851 one William Usher had purchased some of the stock of the corporation, and in that year he purchased all the remainder of such stock and became the sole owner of the water supply system and carried on the business, supplied the people with water, for which he received water rents; that from the said William Usher, through various mesne conveyances subsequently and prior to 1888, the said spring and the lot upon which it was situate, with the appurtenances, which included the pump logs and penstocks above stated, were conveyed to this, plaintiff, all of which conveyances were duly recorded, and in the summer of 18S8 the plaintiff was the sole owner thereof; that for several years prior to 1888 the plaintiff had maintained the said Water supply system and had supplied a number of the inhabitants of the village of Little Falls with water in the way heretofore indicated and for which she received water rents which resulted in a con[5]*5siderable net. income to lier; and the seventh finding sets forth that “these pump logs were laid in the ground and covered at various depths as the soil permitted, some places at a depth of two feet or more, anti when rock came near the surface some portions of the logs were not wholly covered and penstocks were erected at various places, to which most of the customers resorted for water, but some were supplied in their houses by means of iron pipes from the pump logs. Some of the logs had been laid for many years, and some were comparatively new, and they were in various stages of preservation, some reasonably sound and some considerably decayed. While kept intact, covered and undisturbed, such logs would last for many years, but when taken out or exposed to air, or air allowed to enter the logs from the ends, by reason of their being disconnected, they were exposed to more rapid decay.”

The eighth finding of fact was as follows: “ In the early summer of 1888 the plaintiff was supplying water to her customers in Little Falls from her said supply system, and for that purpose had her pump logs laid along several streets in way hereinbefore -indicated, and had several penstocks located at different places for such use. At that time the village of Little Falls, under statutes giving-due authority for that purpose, had determined to put in a water system on large scale and at great cost, and in the summer of 1888, commencing in June or July, the street commissioner of the village and men in his employ, under the direction of the president of the village, cut down a number of the plaintiff’s penstocks and dug up and threw out a number of the plaintiff’s pump logs, thus disconnecting her water system, and allowing air to enter the remainder of her logs to a considerable extent, and such action was, at least in part, either directed to be done or sanctioned by the board of trustees of the village; the contractor employed by the village to construct its water works also, in the necessary prosecution of that work, tore up several of the plaintiff’s pump logs with the same effect. For considerable time the plaintiff’s business was thus interrupted by the acts aforesaid, and her revenue for water rents cut off. In some instances she attempted to repair her broken system which had been interfered with as above stated, when the repairs were torn out by the street commissioner by order of the president of the village.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 A.D. 1, 38 N.Y.S. 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyer-v-village-of-little-falls-nyappdiv-1896.