McBroom v. Watkins

11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337, 21 Ohio Dec. 505, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 25
CourtHocking County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 1, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337 (McBroom v. Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hocking County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBroom v. Watkins, 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337, 21 Ohio Dec. 505, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 25 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Peoples, J.

This cáse is submitted to the court on the petition of the plaintiff, John W. McBroom, the separate answers of the defendants, Geo. H. Watkins, William Kirtley, B. W. Baldwin and James R. Marker, the replies of the plaintiff to each of the separate answers of the said Kirtley, Baldwin and Marker, and the evidence.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple and in possession of 10.81 acres of land, more or. less, situated in Hocking county, Ohio, and commonly known as the Hocking Palls Mill property; that said premises are on and include the Hocking river, .at what is known as the Hocking Palls, near the village of Logan, Ohio, on which is a flour mill having, as appurtenant thereto, a perpetual easement in the use of the waters of said river, not required for canal purposes, for operating and driving the machinery of said mill; and that said easement comprehends the right to have the water of said river raised to and maintained at the level as now maintained by the dam, known as the State dam.

The petition further alleges that the premises, including the said'water right, is of the value of about $15,000; that the plaintiff and his grantors have owned said premises from-a date long prior to the location and construction of the canal system of Ohio; that prior to 1840, the state of Ohio adopted the slack water created by Worthington’s mill dam, for a distance of about two miles, making the exit about 200 yards above said mill dam; that in the year 1841, the agents and officers of the state of Ohio built a dam a few feet below the old dam, which State dam still stands intact; that in 1843, in settling and adjusting claims for damages done to said mill and its appurtenances, the agents and officers of. the state agreed with the heirs of Thomas Worthington, .that-the awards and assessments made by the state were, made ojj.the supposition that thereafter no more water should betaken [339]*339'from the Hocking river at» said falls than was actually necessary, for canal purposes; that the Hocking canal has been wholly abandoned and unused for canal purposes for more than fifteen years, and that the defendants as agents and officers of the state' of Ohio are threatening to, and are about to destroy said dam, and if not restrained will'illegally and wrongfully destroy same, to plaintiff’s great .and irreparable injury.

Then follows a- prayer for a perpetual injunction against the destruction of the said dam and water power and for all proper relief.

The defendants, William Kirtley and B. W. Baldwin, file separate answers, identical in substance and therefore considered together, admitting their official capacity as members of the board of public works of the state of Ohio, and in their first defense denying all .other allegations of the petition; in a second defense they each allege a fee simple ownership in the state of Ohio of the dam or dams attempted to be described in the petition of the plaintiff and all rights and appurtenances attached thereto, and that the dam with the slack water created thereby constitutes approximately four miles of the Hocking canal, which Hocking canal the state owns in fee simple, and that such ownership of the state includes all water rights in and connected with' such dam or dams, and that they, as such officers, had not done or attempted to do anything in relation to said dams except in pursuance of the duties enjoined upon them by the laws of Ohio, as members of the board of public works of the state, nor were they threatening or intending to do anything in relation to such dam or dams, except in the performance of their duties as pro vided by law.

In a third defense these defendants set up, by way of estoppel, that this matter has been adjudicated in a case, No. 1080, in the Circuit .Court of Franklin County, Ohio, wherein Robert Wright, a former owner and predecessor in ownership ’of the plaintiff in this action, and from whom the plaintiff claims title to the said min and the water right, was the plaintiff, and the Columbus, Hocldng Valley & Athens Railway Company was defendant; that said action was .prosecuted on error to the Supreme Court of the state, in case No. 5623, where the decree and [340]*340judgment of the circuit court was affirmed, and that in said case the same question, to-wit, the plaintiff’s right to the water power in connection with said mill was directly in issue, and that the prayer of the petition was to restrain the destruction of the said water power.

.The defendant, James R. Marker, answers admitting his official capacity as chief engineer of public works of the state of Ohio and denying all other allegations of the petition; and in a second defense set up ownership in fee simple in the state of Ohio in the dam or dams attempted to be described in the petition of the plaintiff and in the slack water created by said dam for about four miles of the Hocking canal, and that the state owns in fee simple the Hocking canal, including all water rights connected with such dam or dams, and alleges that he has never done or attempted to do anything in relation to said dam, except in strict pursuance of the resolution of the board of public works, and that he is not threatening to do nor intending to do anything in relation to such dam or dams except in a lawful manner in conformity with the resolution of said board.

To each of these answers the plaintiff replied denying all allegations of new matter alleged therein.

This is, therefore, a cause in which the plaintiff,' John W. McBroom, seeks a perpetual injunction against the defendants, as agents of the state of Ohio, restraining them from destroying or injuring the dam or dams or either of them, or from in any Other manner destroying or injuring the water power afforded his said mill by said dams, and for all relief to which he may be entitled.

The first question which the court must determine is the relation the plaintiff sustains to the property which he seeks to protect by this action.

,. .By his petition he seeks, not to. protect a public, but a private right. In order for him to succeed he must show by a preponderance of the evidence that he has a right in the use of the water, controlled by the dam or dams in controversy, paramount to the right of the state therein. He must show that he has an easement in the waters that flow past the Falls Mill that is appurtenant to the property described in the petition. ...

[341]*341Were this an ordinary case, it would need no citing of authority to determine that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed for. As between private riparian owners it will not be denied that each has an easement in the water of streams running between their lands, conditioned only that they use the same so as not to damage each other or- the owners of the estates above and below them. As pertinently asked, in his brief, by one of the learned counsel for the plaintiff, did the state divest Worthington of his water power rights ? He answers this question in the negative. But is that answer correct according to the conceded facts and the evidence in this ease.

As appears from the evidence Thomas Worthington built a dam across the Hocking river at what is known as the Hocking Falls Mill and used the water of the Hocking river as power to run the machinery of said mill. This was about the year 1818 and long before the act of February 4, 1825 (23 O.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337, 21 Ohio Dec. 505, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbroom-v-watkins-ohctcomplhockin-1911.