Mayor of New-York v. Bailey

2 Denio 433
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by180 cases

This text of 2 Denio 433 (Mayor of New-York v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of New-York v. Bailey, 2 Denio 433 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1845).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Although it was once doubted whether an action of trespass, or trover, or an action on the case for malfeasance would lie against a corporation, it is now settled in England, as well as in this state that such an action may be maintained against corporations as well as actions upon the case for nonfeasance. (Yarborough v. The Bank of England, 16 East’s Rep. 6; Duncan v. The Surrey Canal, 3 Stark. Rep. 50; Bridge v. The Grand Junction Railway Company, 3 Mees. & Wels. Rep. 244; Marned v. The Monmouthshire [440]*440Navigation Company, 3 Railway Ca. by Munson, Carrow & Oliver, 159; Bloodgood v. The Mohawk & Hudson R. R. Company, 18 Wend. Rep. 9; Townsend v. The Susquehannah Turnpike Company, 6 John. Rep. 90.) The two principal questions presented for our consideration, in this case therefore are, First, whether at the time the motion for a non-suit was made there was sufficient evidence to have authorized the jury upon that evidence, uncontradicted and unexplained, to find that the dam of the defendants was npt in a situation to resist the action of such extraordinary floods as might reasonably have been anticipated; and Secondly, whether if the dam 'was not in a-situation to resist such floods, the corporation of the city of New-York, as the owner of the dam, is answerable for the loss which other persons sustained by reason of such dam being swept away by the flood of 1841.

Upon the first of these questions, there appears but little room for doubt. What evidence was given on the part of the defendants, to contradict or explain the testimony stated in the bill of exceptions, we do not know; and we cannot therefore say whether the verdict of the jury upon the whole case was right or. wrong. But if this case had rested upon the testimony of the plaintiffs’ witnesses alone, as-that testimony is stated in this bill of exceptions, I think the jury would have been authorized to find that the dam was not such an one as ought to have been constructed and maintained for the purpose for which it was in-, tended, and for the safety of those whose property would probably be injured by the breaking of that dam. The degree of care and foresight which it is .necessary to use, in cases of this description, must always be in proportion to the nature and magnitude of the injury that will be likely to result from the occurrence which is to be anticipated and guarded against. And it should be that, care and prudence which a discreet and cautious individual would or ought to.use if the whole risk and loss were to be his- own exclusively. / Here the probable, if not the necessary, consequence of the carrying off of the city dam, by a flood, would be not only to sweep away the buildings and erections of all the owners of property upon the Croton below [441]*441such dam, but also to endanger the lives of such owners and of their families. The dam should, therefore, have been con-' structed in such a manner as to resist such extraordinary floods as might have been reasonably expected occasionally to occur. And if the flood of 1841 was not much higher than any which had been known to occur upon this stream within the memory of man, those who had the charge of the construction of the dam should have anticipated such a flood; and should have provided a dam t.hat would have been sufficient to. resist the operation of that flood. I should think, from the evidence contained in this bill of exceptions, that the width of the water-way, by which the water was. to be discharged over the lip of the dam, was insufficient to discharge the waters of such a flood; whereby the water was raised so as to flow over the embankment of earth and cut it away; and that the whole difficulty and loss arose from not anticipating and guarding against so great a rise in the waters of the stream. Although the flood of 1841 was not an ordinary one, I think the evidence of the plaintiffs was sufficient to authorize the jury to find that it was one of those occasional floods to which the Croton had sometimes been subject, and which should therefore have been provided against by those whose duty it was to guard against the probable consequence of such a flood. C. FJewelling, who lived upon the Croton within two miles of the city dam, and was born there, testified that he had seen the river higher than in 1841, something more than twenty years previous to that time. He says nothing of the floods of 1837 and of 1839, as he Was then in Bedford. But Gedney, Marshall and Tompkins, all of whom lived about two miles above the dam, thought by the height of the water upon Elbow Island that the same was as high in the flood of 1837 as in that of 1841. And Frost and Bailey, jun. both testified that the floods of 1839 and of 1843 were nearly as great as in 1841. If the evidence given by these witnesses was to be credited therefore, the flood of 1841 Was an occurrence which ordinary care and prudence should have anticipated and guarded against.

The question whether the corporation of the city of New-[442]*442York is answerable for the insufficiency of the dam to resist the action of such an occasional flood, is one of more doubt and difficulty. I do not think there is anything in the objection that the corporation, in the construction of the Croton dam and aqueduct, was not responsible for the acts of its agents anservants, if the engineers and water commissioners employed by it are to be considered such agents and servant's. Nor was this a case in which the plaintiffs were required to have had their damages appraised under the provisions of the act of May, 1834, even if they had the right to apply for the appoint ment of commissioners to estimate the amount of their damage.1» under the 13th section of that act; unless, indeed, the counsel for the plaintiffs in error are right in supposing that no common law action could have been brought against the corporation foi such injury to the property of others if no provision for such an appraisal had been made.

I have great difficulty, however, in bringing my mind to the conclusion that the relation of master and servant, or of principal and agent, existed in this case, between the corporation and the engineers and others employed in the construction of this dam; so as to render such corporation liable, on that ground, for negligence which had occurred in such construction. The water commissioners were not appointed by the corporation, nor were they subject to its direction or control in any respect, after it had once signified its will that the work should proceed. Neither had the corporation any right to interfere in the appointment or in the removal of the engineers and others who were employed in the construction of the work; nor even to withhold the payment of their wages, out of the fund provided by law for such payment. It is true the corporation may be said to have set the water commissioners, first appointed by the governor and senate, in motion, by directing them to proceed and execute the work according to the provisions of the statute. But something more than that is necessary to constitute the relation of principal and agent, or of master and servant, between those parties. For a plaintiff in a judgment who delivers an execution to the sheriff to be collected, and directs him to [443]*443proceed thereon according to Jaw, sets such sheriff in motion.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Denio 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-new-york-v-bailey-nysupct-1845.