Folsom v. Freeborn

13 R.I. 200, 1881 R.I. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 5, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 13 R.I. 200 (Folsom v. Freeborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Folsom v. Freeborn, 13 R.I. 200, 1881 R.I. LEXIS 10 (R.I. 1881).

Opinion

Durfee, C. J.

This is a petition for the new trial of an action on the case against the town of Warren. The grounds on which the plaintiff sought to maintain his action may be stated as follows: In 1794, one Duncan Kelley was the owner of certain real estate, consisting of the Homestead or Ferry House lot, so called, and the buildings thereon, situated in Barrington, on the west bank of Palmer’s River, and also of the ferry established across the river. In that year the General Assembly granted him authority to build a bridge across the river at the place of the ferry, and to do whatever might be necessary to its maintenance as a toll-bridge, providing however a draw for the free passage of vessels. Under this authority the toll-bridge, afterwards known as Kelley’s Bridge, was constructed and maintained. In 1812, Duncan Kelley died leaving a will by which he devised his real estate, together with the bridge, to his son John, who subsequently erected, a little south of the bridge and near the west bank of the river, and over the river, the tide-mill mentioned in the declaration. John Kelley died in 1862, and subsequently all his right, title, and interest in the bridge and tide-mill, and in a small part of the adjoining upland, passed to Lewis T. PI oar and Ezra M. Martin, by whom the bridge was conveyed to the State, August 24, 1870, and subsequently the mill was conveyed to the plaintiff’s grantor. The bridge is built on two abutments and two piers. The west abutment and west pier were extended southward beyond the line' of the bridge by John Kelley, when he erected the mill, and form, as extended, the raceway of the mill. The mill was formerly operated by the pressure of the ebbing and flowing tide on a bucket-wheel set in the raceway. This wheel was taken out previous to 1873, and in its absence the mill was run by a portable steam-engine. In August, 1873, the committee of the town of Warren, appointed under an act of the General Assembly authorizing the town to rebuild the bridge, commenced work on it and completed, the work before the end of the year. During the work stones of various sizes, large and small, were thrown around the west abutment at its north end, both in and out of the raceway, for the purpose of rip-rapping it. These stones were carried in large *204 numbers down the raceway and into tbe wheel-pit. The testimony of experts was introduced to show that the rip-rapping was bad workmanship. Meanwhile the plaintiff, who had been at work since January, 1873, making a patent tide-wheel for the mill, completed it and had it ready to put down in November, 1873. The wheel, to work well, had to be submerged. The raceway, unobstructed, contained water enough to submerge it at mean low tide, but, being shoaled by the stones, was too shallow, and accordingly the plaintiff spent the rest of the fall, the ensuing winter, and part of the next spring in removing the stones. He first put his wheel in, in May, 1874, but the raceway again filling with stones, he was compelled to take it out and remove the stones, and this work he repeated several times. The principal purpose of the action was to recover damages for the injury which the plaintiff claims to have sustained from the stones thrown or carried into the raceway.

The plaintiff also introduced testimony to show that the south end of the extension of the west abutment was constructed so that it might be used as a wharf for the lading and unlading of vessels, and that vessels bringing five or six thousand bushels of corn used to come there, though the approach was somewhat difficult. He further submitted testimony to show that the water about the wharf had been shoaled or reduced by the drifting of the stones used in rip-rapping, and that since the rip-rapping vessels had come to the wharf, one of which touched bottom at the stern, grounding on a heap of stones in line with the raceway.

After the plaintiff had introduced testimony to prove his case as above stated, the court ruled that there was no evidence on which the action could be maintained, and instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants. The jury having done so, the plaintiff petitions for a new trial for error in the ruling.

In this State, as we have often decided, the fee of the soil under tide-water, and within its ordinary ebb and flow, is in the State. The riparian owners are, or at least were, until the re cent statute, Pub. Laws R. I. cap. 611, § 6, of March 30, 1877, permitted to build and maintain wharves in front of their land, provided they are so built as not to impede navigation. They may also erect other structures in or over tide-water in front of *205 their lands, where they do not interfere with the public right of navigation, and maintain and enjoy them against everybody but the State. And even if such a structure should happen to encroach upon the public right so as to be a nuisance a ', common law, the owner of it would nevertheless be entitled to the protection of the law against a mere trespasser, or even against persons navigating the water, if they could by the exercise of reasonable care avoid it and still enjoy the public right. Bowden v. Lewis, ante, p. 189, and cases there cited.

These principles, however, are not sufficient to support the plaintiff’s action in so far as it is brought to recover damages for shoaling or obstructing the so called raceway. The gist of the action in that regard is, not injury to any tangible piece of property, like a vessel or other structure belonging to the plaintiff, movable or fixed in the public water, but injury to an alleged incorporeal right or easement, involving an appropriation of a portion of the tidal flow to private uses as the motive power of a mill. Of course if the plaintiff is entitled to any such novel and extraordinary right or easement, it is for him to establish his title, inasmuch as it is in derogation of the public rights, being to a great extent at least incompatible with them. The plaintiff contends that he has established his title in two ways : namely, first, by prescription or legislative grant presumably lost; and, second, by proof of possession or actual enjoyment.

The action is not maintainable on the ground of prescription in the stricter meaning of the word, for nothing can be claimed by prescription which owes its origin to matter of record, and it is only by legislative grant, which is matter of record, that an individual can acquire any private right or interest in tide-water. 8 Greenleaf s Cruise, *422. Can the action be maintained on the ground of a legislative grant the record of which may be presumed to have been lost ? It is well settled that title to property, both corporeal and incorporeal, may rest on such a presumption. In Read v. Brookman, 8 Term Rep. 151, 158, decided in 1789, Mr. Justice Buller said: “ For these last two hundred years it has been considered as clear law that grants, letters patent, and records may be presumed from length of time.” In support of this remark he referred to the leading case of Bedle v. Beard, 12 Rep.

*206 5. In the Mayor of Kingston upon Hull v. Horner, 1 Cowp. 102, it was held that a grant or charter from the crown was presumable under circumstances after a possession of three hundred and fifty years. In Powell

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The People v. . Vanderbilt
28 N.Y. 396 (New York Court of Appeals, 1863)
Crooker v. Pendleton
23 Me. 339 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1843)
Veazie v. Dwinel
50 Me. 479 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1862)
Gunter v. Geary
1 Cal. 462 (California Supreme Court, 1851)
Gould v. James
6 Cow. 369 (New York Supreme Court, 1826)
Rogers v. Jones
1 Wend. 237 (New York Supreme Court, 1828)
Mills v. Hall
9 Wend. 315 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
People v. Cunningham
1 Denio 524 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1845)
Inhabitants of Arundel v. M'Culloch
10 Mass. 70 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)
Brayton v. City of Fall River
113 Mass. 218 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 R.I. 200, 1881 R.I. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folsom-v-freeborn-ri-1881.