Howard v. City of Buffalo

151 A.D. 198, 135 N.Y.S. 303, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7721

This text of 151 A.D. 198 (Howard v. City of Buffalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. City of Buffalo, 151 A.D. 198, 135 N.Y.S. 303, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7721 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

Brown, J.:

Action by the plaintiffs to recover damages caused by flooding certain lands in the southern part of the city of Buffalo and for an injunction compelling the defendants to remove obstructions in. the Buffalo river and certain embankments causing the floods complained of.

Action commenced January 2, 1906; trial commenced January 9, 190Y; cause submitted April 23, 1910.

- The Buffalo river and the Cazenovia creek have their sources in streams in the western portion of Wyoming county, flow generally westerly across the center of Erie county, uniting' at about South Park avenue, in the city of Buffalo; flowing thence in a general northwestern direction to Lake Erie, draining a watershed, of about four hundred square miles. From South Park avenue the river takes a very crooked and winding course of six miles to reach the lake, a distance of less than two miles j having a natural fall of about five feet; the water in ordinary stages being from six' .to ten feet deep and about one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet wide, confined in a channel with generally abrupt banks, four to eight feet above the water level, necessarily a slow and sluggish stream.

With quite persistent regularity this river reaches a highly-flooded condition twice each year, generally once in the fall or winter and once in the spring. These floods have annually occurred since the earliest recollection of living witnesses. Prior to about the year 1888 the flooded area and the bounds of the river in its flooded condition were generally limited and confined by the clearly defined flood banks, marking with cer[201]*201tainty what, might he called the flood channel, this flood channel varying from 500 feet to 1,500 feet in width along the course of the river, and, excepting extraordinary rain falls or sudden melting of very deep snow, securely keeping the river flood waters therein. Under conditions then existing, before the acts of the defendants complained of, ordinary floods did not overflow Buffalo river flood banks at Abbott road in the vicinity of Hopkins street, and reach plaintiffs’ lands.

At the time the defendants the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company, the Buffalo Creek Railroad Company, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Company constructed their bridges and approaches thereto across this flood channel, and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company constructed its lower bridge and the approaches thereto across the same, openings were left in all their approaches to their said bridges, which resulted in allowing such river flood waters to flow down through the flood channel and escape to the lake without reaching plaintiffs’ lands. These openings were maintained by the defendant the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company from 1852 to 1888; by the defendant the Buffalo Creek Railroad Company from 1872 to September, 1886; by the defendants the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Company from 1882 to 1892. Since the construction of such crossings over the Buffalo river flood channel, and within twenty years prior to the commencement of this action, all the last-named defendant-railroad companies filled in all such openings with solid earth embankments, leaving no means for such flood waters to pass down such channel, except as were afforded by the channels under their respective bridges; and at about the same time all the said defendant railroad companies filled in all openings under their railroad tracks' to the west of lands north of Tifft street for a long • distance southerly from the Buffalo river. The defendant the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, in about the year 1891, constructed a long earth embankment westerly from the point of the overflow of the Buffalo river in times of flood at Abbott street to its junction with the Buffalo Creek Railroad Company south of the Buffalo [202]*202river.. About the year 1895 the defendant the Buffalo Creek Bailroad Company unloaded several carloads of heavy iron slag from-its bridge into- the river channel under said bridge; and in 1897 the defendant the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Bailroad Company dumped several carloads of stone into the river channel from its lower bridge. Since such openings in said approaches to said defendants’ bridges and the openings under the railroad tracks to the west of lands north of Tifft street were closed, such obstructions placed in the river channel, and the embankment of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Bailroad Company was erected, at times of ordinary flqod the waters in the Buffalo river have risen to such a height as to flow over the south bounds of the flood channel at Abbott road in the vicinity of Hopkins street, running thence southerly and westerly across lands north of Tifft street, unable to return to the river or escape to the lake by reason of the embankments of said defendant railroads, finally reaching plaintiffs’ lands, causing the damage complained of. Such flood waters so flowing over the south bounds of the flood channel of the Buffalo river at Abbott road in the vicinity of Hopkins street were of the following depths on Abbott road: December 16, 1893, 1.45 feet; May 20, 1894, 2.05 feet; March 20, 1896, 1.65 feet; January 13, 1898, 1.20 feet; January 13, - 1900, .58 feet; February 9, 1900, 2.12 feet; December 14, 1901, .95 feet; April 22, 1901, 1.12 feet; March 1, 1.902, 3.05 feet; January 29-30, 1903, 1.12 feet; February 7-8, 1904, 3.15 feet; March 3, 1904, .80 feet; March 19, 1905, 2.25 feet; December 6, 1906, .42 feet; February 15, 1908, 1.70 feet; February 24, 1909,.28 feet. Abbott road at-the point -of overflow is about 10 feet above mean lake level.

It seems to be conceded by all parties that at the time when flood waters are escaping from the channel of the Buffalo river at Abbott road in the vicinity of Hopkins street- in quantities sufficient to reach plaintiffs’ lands the entire flood waters in the channel are equivalent toa discharge of about 25,000 cubic feet per second down the channel. It is established by satisfactory evidence that the waters have a mean velocity of 4% feet per second from a point just above the Lackawanna bridge to just below the Lake Shore bridge. Dividing the quantity of the [203]*203discharge per second by the velocity per second establishes the size of the cross-sectional area through which the quantity to be discharged will flow in a second. From this data it is seen that a cross-section of the flood waters would measure about 5,555 square feet, which would indicate the necessary minimum cross-sectional area of the space for the waters under each bridge; that any bridge affording a less area or cross-sectional space would not permit the passage of such waters without obstruction, unless a greater speed of current was created. With the flood water flowing over the south bank of the flood channel at Abbott road, in the vicinity of Hopkins street, in sufficient quantities to injure plaintiffs’ premises the sectional area of the space actually occupied by the waters under defendants’ bridges is as follows, as ascertained from the flood of 1904:

Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company bridge, with water at 6.85 feet above mean water level, 4,470 square feet; the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the Hew York, Chicago and St.

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Bluebook (online)
151 A.D. 198, 135 N.Y.S. 303, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-city-of-buffalo-nyappdiv-1912.