Mairs v. Gallahue

9 Va. 94, 9 Gratt. 94
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 26, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 Va. 94 (Mairs v. Gallahue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mairs v. Gallahue, 9 Va. 94, 9 Gratt. 94 (Va. 1852).

Opinion

Lee, J.

This was an application on behalf of the appellee, S. M. Galiahue, to the County court of Jackson, under the act of assembly, for leave to erect a dam across Big Sandy creek in said county, for the purpose of working a water grist mill and saw mill. The applicant claimed to „be the owner of the banks on both sides of said creek, at a place specified, and prayed a writ of ad quod damnum for the purpose of erecting such mills and dam on said lands. The writ was awarded, and an inquest taken, which was returned to the court. The appellant, Thomas Mairs, and four other persons named, appeared in court, and upon their motion were admitted as defendants to contest the application ; and they moved the court to quash the proceedings ; which motion was overruled by the court; and the defendants excepted. They also moved the [96]*96court to continue the cause, on the ground of the absence of a person who would be an important and material witness on their behalf, if present. This motion the court also overruled; and the defendants excepted. The court thereupon proceeded to hear the case, and after having heard the evidence and weighed all the circumstances, decided in favor of the application, and gave the leave asked for; providing and stipulating, however, in the order, that the applicant, for preventing any impediment to the crossing of the creek where a certain road passed, should keep a ferry boat for the public convenience where the said road crossed. From this order granting the leave aforesaid, Mairs and Kearny applied for and obtained an appeal to the Circuit court of said county of Jackson. And the cause coming on to be heard in that court on the transcript of the record of the proceeding in the County court, and also upon the testimony of the witnesses introduced and examined in the Circuit court by the parties, that court was of opinion that leave to erect said dam was properly given by the County court, and the judgment of the County court was affirmed. And to this judgment of affirmance Mairs obtained a supersedeas from this court.

Several objections have been urged in this court to the regularity of this proceeding, which will be noticed in the order in which they were taken.

The first objection is, that the petition sets forth that the applicant “ owned the banks” on both sides of the creek, instead of alleging that he “ had the fee simple property in the land on both sides of the stream.” The petition in this case was, as it properly might have been, ore tenus; Mead v. Haynes, 3 Rand. 33; and the terms in which its purport and effect are noted on the record should not, perhaps, be the subject of very nice criticism. The terms owner of the land,” “ having the fee simple property in the lands,” [97]*97“ proprietor of the land,” seem to be used indifferently in the act, and to be intended to have the same import. And the expression “ owned the banks on both sides of the creek,” evidently meant that he owned the land on the banks. Indeed, where the petition, as noted, states that he desired the writ of ad quod damnum to issue, it says, “ for the purpose of erecting a water grist mill and saw mill on said lands. Taking the whole together, no doubt can arise as to the meaning intended; and it appears also in a subsequent part of the record, the inquest of the jury, that the applicant was the owner of the lands on both sides of the creek at the place in question.

It is argued that a river properly consists of water, bed and banks; and that if one own the banks only, he does not own the water or the bed. The act, however, does not speak of property “ in the bed” of the stream, but only in the land on both sides ; and it has long since been decided that where the applicant owns the land on both sides of the stream, the presumption is that the bed of it belongs to him also, and therefore it is unnecessary for him to set it forth in his application. Wroe v. Harris, 2 Wash. 126 ; Neale v. Cogar, 1 A. K. Marsh. R. 589. I think there is nothing in this objection.

The next is, that the petitioner states he desired a writ of ad quod damnum to issue for the purpose of erecting a water grist mill, &c., whereas the statute says, “ when any person desiring to build a water grist mill,” &c. The difference is merely verbal and not material, the party’s intention to build a mill, &c. being sufficiently and plainly expressed.

It is contended that the inquest is defective, and exception is taken both to its frame and structure and to the language in which it is expressed. It may be true that it is not drawn with very great clearness or precision, nor according to the rules of grammatical con[98]*98struction and correct composition. But giving to its language a fair and reasonable interpretation, there is no difficulty in ascertaining its true meaning, and that it is substantially responsive to all the requirements of the statute. The expression in the inquest that the jurors “ proceeded to view the premises, to wit, the mill to be erected,” may be an inaccurate one, or it may be that the mill-house had in fact been erected, though leave for the dam had not been yet obtained. But either way, it certainly cannot vitiate. With regard to the ownership of the lands of the persons named in the inquest, the fair construction is not that Grallahue was the owner of those lands, but that the jury proceeded to view the premises; also the land above and below the abutment; also the lands of the persons named; and that those persons were the owners of the lands above and below the lands of Grallahue, which it was supposed might probably be overflowed or damaged; and a finding that their lands would not be overflowed, and that no damage would accrue to any of the proprietors, is substantive compliance with the statute. The finding “ that fish of passage or ordinary navigation will not be obstructed is precisely equivalent to a finding that neither will be so obstructed. The finding that the dam may be erected eight feet high, if irregular, could do no harm; but' in fact it was altogether proper and correct for the jury to specify the height of the dam of which they were undertaking to describe the probable consequences and effects, inasmuch as neither in the petition nor in the order of the court nor in the writ had the height of the proposed dam been specified. Morgan v. Banta, 1 Bibb’s R. 579. And the judgment of the court giving such leave, should specify the .height of the dam allowed, and in this case is to be understood as allowing a dam of the height mentioned in the inquest of the jury. There being thus no substantial defect apparent [99]*99on its face, the county court properly overruled the motion to quash the proceeding.

Upon their application for a continuance of L ± r # case, the contestants did not show any sufficient reason to entitle them to it; and if they had, still they had ample opportunity of offering, and perhaps did offer, the testimony of the witness, Dr. Adams, on the trial in the Circuit court; and the want of his testimony on the trial in the County court cannot now be the subject of complaint here.

With regard to the testimony of the physicians and others, touching the probable injurious effects of the erection of the dam on the health of the neighborhood, set out in the second bill of exceptions taken on the trial in the County court, it may be said to be at least very unsatisfactory.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Va. 94, 9 Gratt. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mairs-v-gallahue-va-1852.