Converse v. Portsmouth Cotton Oil Refining Corp.

281 F. 981, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2198
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1922
DocketNo. 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 281 F. 981 (Converse v. Portsmouth Cotton Oil Refining Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Converse v. Portsmouth Cotton Oil Refining Corp., 281 F. 981, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2198 (4th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

KNAPP, Circuit Judge.

The appellee, Portsmouth Cotton Oil Refining Corporation, complainant below and herein so called, has been the owner for several years of a tract of land on the northerly side of Paradise creek, in Norfolk county, Va., where it has an extensive plant and carries on a large and lucrative business. Its operations require the use of large quantities of water, which it obtains from this creek under the riparian rights incident to its ownership of the adjacent land. Paradise creek is a small tidewater stream, which flows into the southern branch of the Elizabeth river. Prior to the acts complained of it was navigable, by vessels drawing up to around 5 feet of water, for some distance above complainant’s property, and was in fact used by such vessels more or less frequently.

In April, 1919, the United States entered into contract with H. P. Converse & Co. for dredging certain areas in the Navy Yard at Norfolk, "and_ doing certain other work, in accordance with detailed plans and specifications. The dredged material was to be deposited on lands described as H, I, and J; the first two belonging to the United States Housing Corporation and the third to complainant. This contract, or the work to be done under it, was sublet to the United Dredg[983]*983ing Company; but it appears to be admitted that liability to complainant, if any there be, is the liability of both concerns.

During the progress of the work a great deal of mud and other material escaped from the dumping grounds into Paradise creek, with the result that its waters were polluted and its navigability destroyed. Indeed, the creek seems to have been filled up to such an extent as to hold very little water at low tide. In consequence there was expensive interruption of complainant’s business, caused by lack of water, and considerable injury to its plant and mechanical equipment.

Accordingly, in June, 1920, while the work was still going on, complainant brought this suit, to restrain defendants from continuing to allow the dredged material to get into the creek, to recover the damages already suffered, and to require defendants to restore the creek to its former depth and condition. A temporary injunction, motion to vacate which was denied, stopped the deposit of material on the areas named and compelled defandants to dispose of it elsewhere. In due course answer was filed and the case tried. The trial court held, for reasons stated in its opinion, that the evidence sustained the allegations of the bill and entitled complainant to the relief prayed for, and referred the matter to Col. John C. Oakes, a United States Army Engineer, as special master, to inquire and report: (a) What was necessay to restore Paradise creek to its depth and condition before the work was begun; (b) what damage complainant had already sustained ; and (c) what further damage it would sustain if the creek could not be restored to its former condition. In March, 1921, after extended hearing, the special master reported: (a) That complainant had been damaged to the amount of $8,753.56; (b) that the creek • could be restored to its former condition at a cost of approximately $13,000; and (c) specifying the work to be done to accomplish that result.

Objections were filed to this report, and in July following the cause was recommitted to the special master to ascertain and report, among other things, whether complainant could be provided with sufficient water by reopening the old basin, or opening a new basin, in front of its plant, the size and cost of such a basin, and whether it could be maintained in future for the needed purpose. Some further testimony was taken, and a supplemental report submitted in September, to the effect, in substance, that the proposed method was impracticable and would not afford permanent relief. It is also stated in this report that the creek could not be placed in the same condition as before the dumping commenced, because the mud “was distributed over the whole bed of the stream, including the ordinary channel and the side slopes to the limit of high water”; that the only thing that can now be done is to excavate to an equivalent waterway; that the necessary size of a new channel had been carefully considered in making the former report; and that the dredging therein specified would provide an equivalent stream and give complainant as large a supply of water as it had before defendants began their operations. A further brief report in October contains nothing of importance, and reference thereto may be omitted.

[984]*984The decree of November, 1921, overrules defendants’ objections, confirms all the reports of the special master, gives complainant a judgment for $8,753.56, and grants a mandatory injunction as follows:

“The court doth further order and enjoin the defendants to proceed forthwith to restore Paradise creek in Norfolk county, Va., to the depth and condition in which it was immediately before they began the work mentioned in the bill of complaint, in accordance with the plan suggested in said reports, by excavating and removing from the bed of said creek sufficient material, to provide a clear channel 50 feet wide and 3 feet deep at mean low water, with side slopes of not less than one vertical and three horizontal from the mouth of said creelt to a point 1,000 feet above the site of complainant’s plant, with a widening of the channel for 300 feet opposite complainant’s plant, to form a basin from and including the channel to a line drawn parallel to the direction of the channel and passing through the suction of complainant’s intake pipe.”

From this decree defendants appeal.

[1] On the findings of the court below, amply supported by testimony, it cannot be seriously doubted that complainant has been damaged by the filling up of Paradise creek to the full amount of the money judgment awarded, or that the acts of defendants outlined above were the proximate cause of the damage. We come, then, at once to the 'question of liability. The argument pressed by defendants is in brief that the government designated the areas in which the dredged material should be deposited, and where it was in fact deposited; that the bulkheads or dikes and other structures provided for retaining the material in those areas and preventing its escape into the creek were satisfactory to the officer in charge and approved by him; that the work was accepted and paid for by the government as having been performed in compliance with the contract; and that, as matter of law, there is no liability for incidental damage resulting from the performance of government work in accordance with government directions.

The correctness of this proposition may be conceded when the incidental injury is the necessary and unavoidable consequence of doing the work; that is to say, when the work cannot be done without inflicting the injury. If the desired improvement of this Navy Yard could have been made in no other way than by depositing the dredged material where it would escape into Paradise creek, and thus deprive complainant of its needful supply of water, it might well be argued that the contractors could not be held responsible. Gibson v. United States, 166 U. S. 269, 17 Sup. Ct. 578, 41 L. Ed. 996; Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U. S. 141, 164, 21 Sup. Ct. 48, 45 L. Ed. 126. But plainly that is not the case in hand.

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Bluebook (online)
281 F. 981, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/converse-v-portsmouth-cotton-oil-refining-corp-ca4-1922.