Brown v. . Bowen

30 N.Y. 519
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 30 N.Y. 519 (Brown v. . Bowen) 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
Brown v. . Bowen, 30 N.Y. 519 (N.Y. 1864).

Opinion

Mullin, J.

The plaintiffs at the time of the erection of the dam by the defendant, were in the actual use and occupation of the premises, on which the mills in question were located, and they and those under whom they claimed, had been in possession of the same for quite a number of years prior to the erection of said dam. It was proved that the defendant erected the dam, and that by means of it the water had been set back upon the plaintiffs’wheels, thereby reducing the power thereof, and injuring the plaintiffs’ mills. It cannot be denied that if these were the only facts in the case, the plaintiffs would be entitled to recover. Each of the parties had the right to use the waters of the stream on his own premises, for any purpose for which it might be legitimately used, and neither had the right by *538 any erection on , his own premises to interfere with such enjoyment to the prejudice of such other. (Angelí on Water-Courses, § 340.) The. only exception to this rule, that now occurs to me, is that where both parties draw water from the same dam, each has the right to continue to use the water, whatever the effect may be on the other, unless such other has acquired by grant or prescription, the right to an exclusive use, or to use whenever there is not water enough for both.

The learned author says (§ 340, cited supra): The maxim sic utere tuo, &c., applies as well to setting back the water of a watercourse above the owner’s land in the natural channel of the stream, as it does to an actual overflow of land. * * ' * No single proprietor without consent, has a right to make use of the flow in such manner as will be to the prejudice of any other, and1 that he has no more power to apply it to a purpose which occasions a return of the water on the land above, than he has to cause a diminution of the quantity below. He cannot alter the level of the water either where it enters or where it leaves his property.

Bayley, Justice, in Saunders v. Neuman, says: If a person stops the current of a stream which has immemorially flowed in a given direction, and thereby prejudices another, he subjects himself to an action.

. Any impediment, say the supreme court of Pennsylvania, in the stream caused by the defendant’s dam, by which the plaintiff’s mill is stopped from grinding in any state of the water, or is made to grind slower or worse than it otherwise would, is an injury for which the plaintiff would be entitled to damages. But it is unnecessary to cite authorities; the principle has been recognized too long to admit of controversy at this day.

The acts done-by the defendant being prima facie actionable, it is necessary, in the next place, to ascertain whether the plaintiffs could, under the circumstances, maintain an action for the damages resulting from the injury. Before *539 the code, the remedy of the injured party was by an action on the case. (Angelí on Water-Courses, § 395.) That form of action could be maintained by his tenant in possession, and by the landlord or reversioner. (Same section.) Title was not necessary, unless the plaintiff sought to recover full damages for the injury to his property. From the very nature and necessity of the case, a temporary occupant must be entitled to sue; and as such occupant could only recover damages sufficient to compensate him for the injury sustained, ah action must also be given to the reversioner, or the party sustaining perhaps the largest amount of damages would be left remediless.

It follows that the plaintiff would be entitled in this case to damages to an amount sufficient to indemnify for the injury to such interest as he had in the premises. But the plaintiffs in their complaint allege that they were joint owners of the mills, and they were bound to prove it. Possession is grima facie evidence of ownership ■ of real estate. In 1 Cowen & Hill’s ¡Notes, 353, it is said: “ The mere possession of property, however recent, will enable the occupant to recover or defend against a stranger.in ejectment, trespass,” &c.

But the defendants showed title in their ancestor subsequent to the deed from their ancestor to Messenger, and no title is shown out of him. It appears, however, that several persons were in possession after Luther Bowen left possession in 1835, and before the defendants went in. The defendants occupied the premises adjoining, and never made claim to the premises occupied by the plaintiffs. Under these circumstances, it seems, to me that the law will presume the plaintiffs lawfully in possession, and.entitled to recover damages for the injury sustained by them.

The plaintiffs, to prevent the defendant from alleging title to the premises-, showed that the defendant’s father was in the office at the time Edward Brown, one of the plaintiffs, purchased the premises on which the plaintiffs’ mills are located, and something was said in presence of *540 Bowen, about Brown having bought the land. The witness’s impression was that Bowen said he had come to buy the land; he did not claim that lie owned it. This is very loose evidence on which to rest an estoppel; but it cannot be said that it is not some evidence, and sufficient had it been submitted to the jury, to support a verdict finding the estoppel. The court was not requested to submit the question to the jury, and at the close of the plaintiffs’ case, and after the defendant had put in their documentary evidence, “the court decided that as the evidence then stood, the defendants were estopped as matter of law from claiming the plaintiffs’ premises, so far as the damage had been ■ done to the plaintiffs’ mills by the dam.” To which ruling the defendants’ counsel excepted. At the time this decision was made, no question could be submitted to the jury; the defendants had not as yet given any parol proof, and I cannot discover that the learned judge decided anything. It was an intimation to the defendants’ counsel that if they did not give evidence that would do away the plaintiffs" evidence on the subject of estoppel, he .would hold them estopped. The direction affected the rights of neither party, and unless the question is presented again in some other part of the record, the defendant must fail in attacking the judge on this branch of the case. But the judge did charge that the defendants were estopped from setting up and relying upon their title to the premises as a defense tc the action; to which charge the defendants’ counsel excepted, Under this charge the jury were not at liberty to consider the question of estoppel as a question of fact. They were bound to consider the case, on the assumption that as matter of law, the defendants were estopped from asserting title to the premises. In this the court erred. The question belonged to the jury, and should have been submitted to them as a question of fact. But the defendant acquiesced in its being withheld, but insisted the instruction was wrong as a legal proposition. There ivas no dispute about the facts, and ordinarily it would be a question of *541 law whether the facts proved, established the proposition, to establish which they were proved.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.Y. 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-bowen-ny-1864.