Campbell v. Smith

8 N.J.L. 172
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 N.J.L. 172 (Campbell v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Smith, 8 N.J.L. 172 (N.J. 1825).

Opinion

Ewing, 0. J.

A stream of water was accustomed for a long series of years and beyond the memory of the most aged of the vicinage, to flow in a natural channel in the township of Springfield, in the county of Essex. In the year»" [176]*1761800, John Clark built a paper mill at a short distance from-this ancient water course, on a lot of land of which he had-, become the owner, through which it did not run and to-which it did not adjoin. Some time after the erection of the mill, Clark placed, not on his own land but on the land of John Denman, a dam across the ancient water course and dug a ditch whereby he led the water diverted from its-channel into a pond on his own land, fed by other streams, on which he mainly, relied for his manufacturing operations. In the summer of 1822, the defendants, then the owners, of" the land through which the stream had in times pa-st flowed and of course, of its ancient bed, built a pasteboard mill, and to aid in the necessary supply of water, in October of that year, prostrated the da-m and thereby permitted the water to resume its ancient channel, and deprived the plaintiff, for some time previous become the owner of Clark’s mill, of the advantage which he and his predecessors for some years had used and enjoyed.

The plaintiff sought redress by the present action brought-to November term, 1822, and tried at the April Circuit, 1823, before Justice Hossell, when the jury found a verdict for the defendants after a charge from the Judge, in which having first given a view of the claims of the parties and of' the evidence on both sides, he proceeds thus.—(Here the Chief Justice read the charge.)

The verdict is impugned by the plaintiff, because as he alleges the Judge presented the case to the jury in too limited a view, placing it only on the length of time and the-nature of Clark’s possession and that he did not, as he ouglit to have done, inform them that under the circumstances of' the case, they were warranted to presume against the claim of the defendants.

I do not understand the charge precisely as the plaiut-iff’scounsel, and hence I do not consider the judge as having-presented so limited a view; for although it is true he told ’•them that relying on time for a presumption of title there-' [177]*177must be twenty years, and those, years of adverse possession, and that in his opinion, submitting the matter however as a question of fact to their examination, the possession of Clark was not adverse, and if so, the case did not afford the plaintiff the requisite period, yet ho also informed them, “that a jury have a right on a possession of less than twenty years attended with circumstances favorable to a presumption of title to presume it.” If then the jury found such circumstances to exist, they wore authorized under this direction, to have presumed a grant and sustained the claim of the plaintiff.

It is true the judge did not inform the jury that under the circumstances of the case they were warranted to presume against the claim of the defendants:—or in other words that upon the facts in evidence the law had deprived the defendants of a right which once existed in them or those under whom they claimed to the flow of the water in the ancient channel. On the contrary, the charge was very distinctly the reverse; and yielding fully that the jury ought to have been informed, if such were the law, that the circumstances did warrant them so to presume, the inquiry results whether such circumstances are presented by the case.

The use and enjoyment of water flowing in an ancient channel through one’s land, and to prevent the diversion and deprivation of it, especially by a person owning no land through which it runs, are rights as certain, recognized and well defined as any within the compass of legal protection. Property in water, and in the use and enjoyment of it, oftentimes as valuable, is as well secured as any other. Among the oldest reports in print will be found an assertion of this right. In the book called Liber assisarum 32 Edw. 3, fol. 194 El. 2, an assise of nuisance was brought because the defendant had made a trench and thereby drawn from a river, a part of the water which had been accustomed to run to supply the mill of the plaintiff. It was adjudged that the plaintiff should recover his damages and that the water [178]*178should be returned to the ancient channel at the cost of the defendant. A train of subsequent cases has sustained the right. Luttrel’s case, 4 Co. 86; Stone v. Bromwich, Yelv. 166; Countess of Rutland v. Bowler, Palm. 290; Shury v. Piggot, Bulst. 309; Sands v. Trefuses, Cro. Car. 575; Cox v. Matthews, 1 Ventr. 237; Palmes v. Heblethwaite, Skinner 65; Mersey and Irwell Navigation Co. v. Douglass, 2 East. 502. In Gardner v. The Trustees of the village of Newburg, 2 John. Ch. Rep. 165, Chanc. Kent said a right to a stream of water is as sacred as a right to the soil over which it flows. It is a part of the freehold of which no man can be disseissed but by law.” Our venerable and learned C. J. Kinsey in the case of Merrit and Parker, 1 Coxe 460, said “ when a man purchases a piece of land through which a natural water course flows he has a right to make use of it in its natural state, but not to stop or divert it to the prejudice of another. Aqua currit et debet eurrere is the language of the law. The water flows in its natural channel and ought always to be permitted to run there, so that all through whose land it pursues its natural course may continue to enjoy the privilege of using it for their own purposes. It cannot legally be diverted from its course without the consent of all who have an interest in it.”

This right, like other rights of property; like “the right to the soil over which it flows;” like “ the freehold of which it is part;” like “the land” through which “it pursues its natural course,” may be lost by efflux of time. Statutes of limitation prescribing the time within which an entry shall be made into lands, tenements or hereditaments, (Rev. Laws 411, See. 9,) and within which every real, possessory,, ancestral, mixed or other action for any lands, tenements or hereditaments shall be brought, (Ibid, See. 19,) are not deemed to comprehend in terms and within their purview, the right now under consideration; but upon the wise principles of such statutes, and in analogy to them, to quiet men’s possession and to put an end and fix a limit to strife, a rule is [179]*179•established that, after the lapse of the period mentioned in those statutes, a grant will be presumed, not says Lord Mansfield, Cowper 215, Eldridge v. Knott and others, that in such cases the Court really thinks a grant has been made, but they presume the fact for the purpose and from a principle of quieting the possession. The period of twenty years is settled in England, according with the time mentioned in the statute of 21 Jac. 1. Our statute prescribing a like period, our rule is the same, and pursuing the analogy, the possession which shall ripen into a right and defeat a title, otherwise valid, must be open, notorious and adverse.

In the case of Prescott v. Phillips, (cited 6 East. 283,) Adair,

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.J.L. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-smith-nj-1825.