Bristol Hydraulic Co. v. Boyer

67 Ind. 236
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 67 Ind. 236 (Bristol Hydraulic Co. v. Boyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bristol Hydraulic Co. v. Boyer, 67 Ind. 236 (Ind. 1879).

Opinion

‘Worden, J.

This was an action by the appellee, against the appellants, to recover damages for erecting and maintaining a dam across a stream of water, and thereby backing the water upon the property and mill wheels of the plaintiff, situate above the dam of the defendants.

Demurrer to the complaint, for want of sufficient facts, overruled. Issue; trial; verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.

We will consider the points made in the brief of counsel for the appellants, for a reversal of the judgment.

It is conceded that the complaint is good, if some exhibits filed with it do not legitimately constitute a part of it. We think they do not, as they are not the foundation of the action. The complaint was sufficient.

The other questions made arise on a motion for a new trial.

As we understand the case made, the plaintiff was the owner of some land and mills near to, but not adjoining, the Little Elkhart River. He was not a riparian owner; that is, he did not own the river bank near to which his mills were situate. His mills were propelled by water taken from the Little Elkhart River by means of a dam across that river, above the point opposite to which his mills were situate. The water was conducted by a race from his dam to his mills, and thence by a tail-race back into that river, a short distance above its confluence with the St. Joseph River. The defendants’ dam was across the St. Joseph River, below its junction with the Little Elkhart, by means of which the water was backed up in the Little Elkhart and in the plaintiff’s tail-race, to the obstruction of his mill wheels. The plaintiff had an easement in the land occupied by his dam, head-race and tail-race, granted [238]*238for the purpose of authorizing the diversion and flow of the water, but he may not have shown that he had acquired the right from all the riparian owners between his dam and the mouth of his tail-race, to divert the water from its natural flow in the bed of the river for the use of his mills.

The appellants claim, as we understand the brief of counsel, that on these facts the plaintiff can not recover; or, if he could recover on the facts, the case made by the evidence differs from that stated in the complaint, and therefore he can not recover in this case. We can not state the positions of counsel for the appellants better than is shown by the following extracts from their brief. They say:

“We submit at this point two propositions :

First. Anon-riparian owner of real estate can not acquire a riaht, as against a lower or upper riparian owner, to divert the water from the natural channel of a flowing stream, in such a sense as that he can maintain an action for damages for the obstruction of his easement or right to divert it.

Second. If a non-riparian owner can acquire a legal right, as against upper and lower riparian owners, to divert the water from a stream, then, in order to recover for an invasion of that right, he must describe the right as it is, and not as an actual riparian right.

In order to enable the appellee to maintain his action against the appellants at all, he must first show that he has a right to the use of the water in the stream which he claims has been obstructed.

“A party suing for the obstruction of his rights to the use of a stream of water must first establish a right in himself to have the water flow in the manner in which he claims its flow has been obstructed. * * *

“ The 13th instruction asked by the appellants presents this question:

[239]*239“ Ifc assumes that every riparian owner of land has a right to have the stream flow through or along his land, without diversion, and the court was asked to instruct the jury, that if the appellee diverted the water from the stream, and did not own the land at the point of diversion and between that point and the place where it was again returned, then such diversion was prima facie wrongful, and the burden of proof rests upon him to show his right to divert the water from the stream. Ever since the Year Books, it has invariably been held that it is illegal to divert a watercourse, unless authorized or justified by the particular circumstances of the ease. Angelí on Watercourses, sec. 97.”

The plaintiff had a right to construct and use his dam, his mills and his head and tail races. He also had the legal right to have the water flow from the mouth of his tail-race in the channel of the river, without obstruction from below backing the water upon his premises.

And we think clearly he could maintain the action without showing that he had acquired the right from the riparian owners of the land intermediate the point at which the water was taken from, and that at which it was returned to, the river, to divert the water from its natural channel and apply it to the purpose of propelling his mills.

If the plaintiff wrongfully diverted the water from the river, to the injury of such riparian owners, it was for them and no one else to complain of the injury. The plaintiff may have been a wrong-doer in respect to the riparian owners mentioned, but that is no defence to an action for the wrong done by the defendants, who are not such intermediate riparian owners, in erecting their dam, and thereby backing the water upon his premises, to his inj ury.

The analogies of the law are clearly with the plaintiff. Thus, in the case of Cutts v. Spring, 15 Mass. 135, the [240]*240plaintiff brought an action of trespass q. c. /., against the defendant for cutting timber upon his land. The plaintiff was in possession of the laud, but the title thereto was not in him, but in the State. The court, in concluding the opinion in the cause, said:

“ The action therefore is rightly brought, and the value of the trees is the proper measure of the damages. For the Commonwealth has a right to call the plaintiffs to account, by a suit for the mesne profits, or in some other way¿ and as the defendants were -wrong-doers to the plaintiff's, these latter ought to bo in possession of the value of the trees, as a fund to meet the claim of the Commonwealth. If not called upon, they have a right to keep the money for their own use, being accountable to none but the Commonwealth.”

To the same effect are the following cases : Graham v. Peat, 1 East, 244; Cooky. Howard, 13 Johns. 276 ; Outcalt v. Durling, 1 Dutch. 443; Inhabitants of Barnstable v. Thacher, 3 Met. 239; Townsend v. Kerns, 2 Watts, 180.

The principle settled by these and other decisions is, that one having the possession of property may maintain an action against a wrong-doer for an injury thereto, which can not be defeated by showing the title to be in some one else than the plaintiff.

We see no good reason why the principle should not be applicable to such a case as the present. The plaintiff’s action ought not to be barred, as we think, on the ground that he had not acquired the right from the riparian owners mentioned, to divert the water from its natural channel. He may bo called upon by such owners to respond in damages for doing so. But, whether he shall be or not, it is aj matter that does not in the least concern the defendants./'

The counsel for the appellants have cited in support of their position the following English cases : The Stockport Waterworks Co.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ind. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bristol-hydraulic-co-v-boyer-ind-1879.