Ely v. . State of New York

92 N.E. 629, 199 N.Y. 213, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1232
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 629 (Ely v. . State of New York) 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
Ely v. . State of New York, 92 N.E. 629, 199 N.Y. 213, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1232 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Haight, J.

On the 31st day of May, 1903, the plaintiff, George Burke Ely, filed a claim against the state for damages alleged to have been sustained by him during the years 1901 and 1902, by reason of flash boards placed upon the dam across the Oswego river at Phoenix, 27. Y., by order of the commissioner of public works, thereby causing the water of that river and that of the Oneida river to overflow the lands of the plaintiff located on Oneida river at what is known as Big Bend, thus destroying his crops and meadows. It appears from the findings of the Court of Claims that the Oneida river and the Oswego river are used as a part of the canal system of the state; the Oneida river flowing into the Oswego river at a point above Phoenix, at which place there was a dam across the Oswego river prior to 1864. In that year the legislature passed an act, known as chapter 475, by which the canal commissioners were authorized at the earliest practicable time, to rebuild the dam at Phoenix at a sufficient height to maintain seven feet of water in the prism of the *216 canal on the levels above the dam, and to construct the same of stone, in such manner as the canal commissioners may determine to be the most practical to render such structure permanent. The canal commissioners, pursuant to this statute, did construct a dam six feet three inches in height, intending thereby to secure the necessary depth of water by the erection of flash boards on the top of the dam, and for that purpose holes were drilled in the stone coping for the placing of iron pins therein to hold the flash boards, the design being not to raise the water any higher than was necessary for canal navigation. The flash boards were to be used temporarily, and were so placed on the dam back of the iron pins that the high water during freshets would carry them off, thus avoiding the raising of the water higher than was necessary for the purpose intended, and avoiding the unnecessary flooding of lands during the high-water seasons of the year. It was further found, as a fact, that every year since the construction of the dam in 1864 flash boards have been placed thereon each year as the low-water period occurred, and after the low-water period had passed thejr were carried off by the elements and natural forces; that there had been an open, notorious and continuous user of the flash boards for twenty years or more prior to the presentation of the plaintiff’s claim, and that such boards were necessary to the operation of the canal and have been used since the reconstruction of the dam, pursuant to the statute of 1864. And as conclusions of law the court found that the state acquired the right under the statute to flood plaintiff’s lands to the extent of the flash boards placed upon the dam, and that the state had acquired the prescriptive right to so flood claimant’s lands, and, therefore, dismissed his claim for damages.

The Court of Claims in its opinion states that the one-year Statute of Limitations contained in the Revised Statutes of 1828, as amended by chapter 836 of the Laws of 1866 (1 R. S. [6th ed.] pages 659, 660, sections 92 and 98), had run and became a bar to the plaintiff’s claim. Section 92, so far as material, provides, in substance, that every person who has *217 suffered, damages by the appropriation of his lands, etc., if he intends to claim such damages, “ shall within one year after such premises, lands or waters have been taken permanently, appropriated or temporarily occupied, and within one year after jurisdiction shall be conferred upon the canal appraisers by the legislature to hear such other injury, file in the office of the canal appraisers a detailed statement of his claim in writing, signed by himself,” etc. Section 98 provides, “No claim for damages, for premises that shall have been appropriated to the use of a canal, at any time before this chapter shall be in force, shall be received by the appraisers, unless it shall be exhibited within one year after this chapter shall become a law; and the premises so appropriated shall be deemed the property of the state; and no claims, other than those so exhibited, shall be paid without the special direction of the legislature.” The difficulty, however, with this contention is that the Court of Claims has failed to find any facts or conclusions of law upon which it can be determined whether or not the statute had run and become a liar to the plaintiff’s claim. Some of the damages alleged were claimed to have resulted from the fixing of the flash boards upon the dam in September, 1902. As to these damages, they occurred within the year of the filing of the claim. The question, therefore, for us to determine arises with reference to the finding that the state had acquired a prescriptive right to use the flash boards upon the dam, and to flood such low lands as may be covered by water by reason of such boards.

In the case of Hammond v. Zehner (21 N. Y. 118) the action was brought to recover damages for flowing the lands of the plaintiff by means of a dam erected by the defendant across the Canaseraga creek for the purpose of supplying power in the running of a grist mill. It was held that the continued user for more than twenty years of an easement injurious to the land of "another, such as the overflowing of the same with water, authorizes the presumption of a grant of such easement.

In the case of Marcly v. Shults (29 N. Y. 346) the action *218 was to recover damages occasioned by the overflowing of the plaintiff’s land with water by raising the height of a dam. The defendant claimed the right to thus raise the water, by prescription, and gave evidence tending to prove that flash boards had been constantly used on the dam for more than twenty years before the dam was repaired, and that the dam as repaired was no higher than the old dam with the flash boards thereon. The trial judge in submitting the case to the jury was asked to charge that if the defendant had, during the twenty years previous, used flash boards on his dam during low water, he could not raise the dam to the height of. the flash boards so as to keep the water up to the height of such boards during the whole year. The judge refused to so charge, but in lieu thereof charged, “ That the defendants were entitled to maintain the dam in question at the same height it had been for twenty years and upwards preceding the time of the alleged injuries. If they believed from the evidence that the defendants at the time the dam was repaired in 1853, or at any other time, had increased the height of the dam in a manner to raise the water and flow it back upon the land of the plaintiff to a greater height than it had been for twenty years preceding that time, then the defendants were liable for the damages sustained by the plaintiff in consequence thereof. On the other hand, if the jury believed from the evidence that the dam had not been raised so as to increase the usual and ordinary height of the water, then the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 629, 199 N.Y. 213, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ely-v-state-of-new-york-ny-1910.