Bridges v. . Purcell

18 N.C. 492
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 N.C. 492 (Bridges v. . Purcell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridges v. . Purcell, 18 N.C. 492 (N.C. 1836).

Opinion

Gaston, Judge

The error assigned upon this appeal, is to be found in an exception to the charge of the judge. The instruction complained of lays it down for law, that if the owner of a tract of land, has, by the erection of a mill-dam, ponded the land of another, under a parol license from him, those who succeed to the estate in the land, thus ponded, cannot, because of a continuance of the nuisance, recover against the alienee of him who erected the dam, unless the dam has been raised to a greater height than was originally permitted. We suppose that this instruction is founded upon a principle, recognised, or thought to be recognised in several adjudications, that a verbal autho *493 rity is not only an excuse for what has been done under it, but cannot be countermanded if once acted upon, without, at least, putting the person licensed in the same condition wherein he was, before acting on the license. The occasion does not call upon us to examine the correctness of this principle, or to define its extent, should the correctness be admitted — and on questions of acknowledged difficulty, where we have not the benefit of a discussion, (and in this case there has been no counsel,) we feel ourselves bound to exercise caution, in forbearing to decide any unnecessary point. The cases that bear upon this doctrine, so far as we know of them, and they are accessible to us, have been carefully examined, and the result is, a conviction that they do not warrant the instruction given; or, if they do, that the instruction, notwithstanding these decisions, is, nevertheless, erroneous. One of the latest of these decisions is Liggins v. Inge, reported 7 Bing. 682. It is not amiss to remark the extreme caution with which that case is spoken of by Chief Justice Denman, in delivering his very able opinion, and the judgment of the court on the case of Mason v. Hill, reported 5 Barn. & Ald. l. Supposing it, however, to have been properly decided, (of which we say nothing,) it seems to us to have been determined on grounds not applicable to the subject now under consideration. In that case, the plaintiff’s father, by parol license, had permitted the defendants to lower the banks of a river, and make a weir above the plaintiff’s mill, whereby less water flowed to it than before; and it was held that the plaintiff, could not sue the defendants, for refusing to raise the bank to its former height, and to remove the weir, and thus continuing the diminished flow of water to the plaintiff’s mill. The determination is distinctly placed upon these positions, that the water in the river is public property, open to the use of all; that the party who first appropriates to his own use any portion of it, flowing through his own land, has the right to the use of what is thus appropriated, against all others; and that the water, after such appropriation, may be given back to the public, and then appropriated by other individuals to their use. The parol license was regarded, not as transferring to the defendants any right *494 or interest in the water accustomed to flow to the plaintiff’s mill, but as giving back and yielding up to the public, —ft*1' the use of whoever might afterwards appropriate it —that quantity of the water which found its way over the weir and the lowered banks. In the present case, the defendants claim the privilege to throw the water of their mill-pond upon the land of the plaintiff. They certainly have it not of common right. They claim it as having belonged to their vendor, because of a license from the former proprietor of the plaintiff’s land, and as having been transmitted to them, along with his sale of the land, which they hold as an appurtenance to the thing thereby conveyed.

The case of Taylor v. Waters, reported 2 Mars. 551, and 7 Taunt. 374, though connected with this subject, decides nothing upon this question. It decides that a license of free admission for the term of twenty-one years to a theatre, on nights of public exhibition, granted for a valuable consideration, is valid. It also decides, that such a license may be granted by parol, notwithstanding the statute of frauds. Of the first position, we see no cause to doubt. A license for a valuable consideration for a specified time, is in law a grant of the thing, or the use thereof for that time, and by the foree of the executed contract as a lease, or a grant, passes an irrevocable right during the time, to the privilege thereby granted. Popham, 151. Vin. Abr. tit. License, E. Vaughan, 351.

^ The correctness of the second position has been ques-Ytioned, (see \ Chitty’s Prac. 339, and Sugden on Vendors, 57,) and is opposed by a strength of reasoning not easily answered. But we have no concern with it. Our Statute of Frauds certainly does not embrace such a license, whatever interest it may pass, for that statute applies not to ,,executed contracts. The case of Winter v. Brockwell, 8 East, 309, comes from a high authority. The plaintiff brought an action on the case for a nuisance in erecting a sky-light over an open area, by means whereof the light .and air were kept from his windows, and noisome smells arising from the adjoining house, were forced into them. On the general issue the defendant gave in evidence that *495 the erection complained of was made with the plaintiff’s express approbation, but that after it was finished the plaintiff became dissatisfied, and required it to be put down. Lord Ellenborough admitted the point to be new to him, but he thought it unreasonable, that after a party had been led to incur expense in consequence of having a license from another to do an act, and that license had been acted upon, the other should be permitted to recal his license, and treat the first as a trespasser, for having done the act. At the trial he instructed the jury, that the plaintiff could not recal his license without offering to pay all the expenses incurred. When a motion was made by one of the counsel for a new trial, Lord Ellen-borough: remarked that he found himself justified in the opinion he had given the jury by the case of Webb v. Paternoster, and thereupon the counsel waived the motion. It is impossible, I think, not to feel with Lord Ellenbo-rough, that the plaintiff’s conduct was unreasonable, and that he ought not to be permitted to insist on the erection being destroyed without some compensation to the defendant for the expense incurred. The quantum of compensation could not be ascertained in that action, and the question would seem to be, whether compensation must be made before the license can be revoked at law, or whether a legal revocation could not be made, and then the execution of the judgment enjoined until compensation made. The case of Webb v. Paternoster (said to be best reported in Palmer, 71,) was determined upon the point, not that the license was not countermandable, but that it was a license for a convenient time only, and that such time had expired before the act done, whereof the plaintiff complained.

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

Related

Camp v. Milam
277 So. 2d 95 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1973)
Ebert v. . Disher
3 S.E.2d 301 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1939)
R. R. v. . R. R
10 S.E. 659 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.C. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-v-purcell-nc-1836.