In re the Fishway in Dam Crossing the West Branch of Delaware

131 A.D. 403, 115 N.Y.S. 745, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 828
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 10, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 131 A.D. 403 (In re the Fishway in Dam Crossing the West Branch of Delaware) 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
In re the Fishway in Dam Crossing the West Branch of Delaware, 131 A.D. 403, 115 N.Y.S. 745, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 828 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Order modified' by striking out the word excepting ” in the last ' clause thereof, which has apparently been inserted therein by inad[405]*405vertence, and as so modified affirmed, with costs, upon the opinion of the court at Special Term.

All concurred.

The following is the opinion delivered at Special Term:

Lyon, J.:

This is an application by the Deposit Electric Company for an order of the court vacating the order of Hon. James S. Whipple, Forest, Fish and Game Commissioner of the State of Hew York, served upon said electric company requiring it to erect an efficient fishway in its said dam by constructing a chute five feet wide, one foot high on the inside and forty feet long, which shall at all times remain tight, unobstructed and uncovered, the bottom of the upper end of which shall be at the four-foot level of such dam, and the lower end of which shall extend under the water below the dam and a portion of the inner part of which chute shall be fitted- with cross pieces to break the force of the current of water passing through the chute, and thus allow the ready ascent of fish from the water below to the water above the dam.

The. facts as established by the affidavits submitted upon this application are, that the Deposit. Electric Company’s $aid dam is situated upo'n the west branch of the Delaware river, which branch is a fresh Water stream about seventy-five miles in length, having its origin at Stamford, H. Y., and joining the east branch of the river at Hancock, H. Y., and it may be inferred from the affidavits that the Delaware river meets tide water at Philadelphia, some forty miles from its termination in Delaware bay, although doubtless as a fact perhaps immaterial here, somewhat further up stream ; that in the year 1822 the Legislature of the State of Hew York by chapter 195 declared the west branch of the Delaware river to be a public highway, the- act providing, however, “ that nothing herein contained shall be construed t.o prevent any person or persons from erecting, keeping and maintaining over, on or across the said west and east branches of the said river * * * any bridges, mill dams, water fences or eel weirs, to be erected or constructed in such manner as in no wise to interrupt or materially injure the free navigation of the waters of the said streams with rafts or lumber in time of an ordinary freshet for running lum[406]*406ber.” That , in the year 1828 by chapter 142 the Legislature provided that it should be lawful for the three persons therein named, - their associates and assigns, to erect and maintain a dam across the west branch of the Delaware river at the location of the said Stiles-ville dam, not exceeding twenty-four inches above low-water level, “ but there shall be constructed and maintained in said dam a sluice-way of such dimensions and construction as to render the passage safe and easy for boats, arks and rafts at all times during the continuance of said dam,” and that the dam should be constructed in . three years and should not affect or-injure the rights or properties of any person unless with consent first obtained, and that this act and every thing herein contained shall .be deemed to be taken subject to the right of the Legislature, at any time hereafter, to alter, modify or repeal at pleasure.”

That about the year 1830 a brush and stone dam surmounted by hardwood plank, making the dam in'all two or three feet in height,, was constructed upon the site of the present Stilesville dam, and that it furnished the power which operated a saw mill, carding mill, axe factory and excelsior factory successively, portions of the dam at times being washed out, but being restored and probably •raised one foot when owned by Collett, until about the year 1895, when a large portion of the dam went out and was not-rebuilt, and the business at the dam was abandoned; that in- or about the year 1901 the Deposit Electric Company purchased the property and built a dam, which is the upper portion of the present dam, which was constructed by bedding five lines of timbers, each about one foot square, constituting a substructure of stringers or mud sills, twenty-four feet in width, covering a space across the river, held in place by long iron rods driven through the timbers and into the ground. Upon the foundation afforded by these stringers the present dam. of masonry, timbers and planking was constructed. The present dam is two or three feet higher than the old brush dam originally constructed, is about three hundred and fifty feet in length, and since the construction in the summer and fall of 1902 ■ of the crib apron work, as hereinafter stated, is about twenty-four feet in width, with a spillway one hundred feet long, the crest of which is one foot lower than the crest of the remaining two hundred and fifty feet of the dam.

[407]*407There was a spillway and apron in the brush dam. as originally constructed, and ñsh could pass u¡i over the dam at all times of the year excepting in times of low water ; and before the construction of the dam by the Deposit Electric Company, shad were at times caught several miles above the dam, and other fish were more numerous above the dam than since the construction of the present dam. It was not possible for shad or other fish to pass up over the dam constructed by the Deposit Electric Company in 1901, nor is it possible for any fish to pass up over the present dam since the spillway and alleged fishway were constructed in 1902, unless during the periods of extraordinary freshets, if, indeed, fish run at such times. In periods of ordinary water the lower end of the spillway is out of the water, and during the greater portion of the year, while the slash boards are on, there is very little water in the river below the dam, between the dam and the point in the river where the water from the flume re-enters the river some seventy to eighty rods below the dam. During the earlier years many rafts of logs and lumber were annually run down the Delaware river, but during the later years the running of rafts has been infrequent.

During a considerable portion of the year slash boards are maintained by the electric company upon the spillway, raising it to the height of the remainder of the dam, and at times slash boards have been placed by the company upon the remaining 250 feet of the dam, and also sufficiently high upon the spillway to raise it to a corresponding height.

The fish which inhabit the west branch of the Delaware river are the ordinary fresh-water fish, mostly bass, chub, trout, pickerel, suckers and bullheads, and usually in the spring of the year shad pass up the river from the ocean. The land on each side of the river at the ends of the dam, and above for a distance, is owned by the Deposit Electric Company, which has also acquired the rights of flowage of the lands covered by the present pond which extends nearly, if not quite, twice as far up the river as the pond of the original brush dam. '

In the winter and spring of 1901 and 1902 the gravel below the dam for practically the whole length of the dam was washed out, creating a deep hole nearly or quite across the river, and threatening the undermining and destruction of the dam.

[408]*408By chapter 594 of the Laws of 1902 the Legislature appropriated for a fishway in tlie Delaware river over Deposit Electric Company’s dam, fifteen hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary.”

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Bluebook (online)
131 A.D. 403, 115 N.Y.S. 745, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-fishway-in-dam-crossing-the-west-branch-of-delaware-nyappdiv-1909.