McDougle v. Clark

46 Ky. 448, 7 B. Mon. 448, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 26, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 Ky. 448 (McDougle v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDougle v. Clark, 46 Ky. 448, 7 B. Mon. 448, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 53 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal brings upan order of the County Court of Christian county, granting to Isaac Clark the privilege of erecting a mill and dam on the west fork of Red river, upon his paying ten dollars, the value of an acre of ground, the property of McDougle, condemned by the inquest; and also $7 50 assessed by the inquest as damages to be occasioned by the overflowing of three-fourths of an acre of McDougle’s land. ■■ -

The grant of this privilege is opposed by McDougle on two principal grounds : 1st. That the proposed dam will entirely destroy a spring'on the margin of the creek, á few yards only above it, the use of which he claims to be important to the occupants of his adjacent farm ; and, 2d. That it will entirely destroy the use of his own dam. and mill situated within one hundred yards above th© proposed scite of the new dam. Pie insists that these certain consequences of the exercise of the privilege granted to Clark, either constitute an insuperable objection to the grant, or require, as a pre-condition to its operation, that he himself, should be compensated for the injuries which they imply, the entire omission of which compensation, is alledged to be an important error in the proceeding, even if the privilege should have been grant-[449]*449fed oil any terms. It is contended on the othef hand-, that the existing dam of McDougle is worth nothing, that the mill having been burnt down nearly two years before the present application was made; and no indication having been given of an intention to rebuild it, nor any ste-p taken with that view, until after this application was made, the mill privilege of McDougle was lost, and that the little mill built by him during the pendency of this proceeding in the County Court, was a mere pretence resorted to for the purpose of defeating this application, and preserving his own privilege without a real compliance with the objects for which it was granted or the requisitions of the law; and that the dam and mill and claim of privilege were, therefore, properly disregarded. And with regard to the alledged spring, it is contended that it is a mere seap from the old dam, of no value, and never used or regarded as a spring until it was deemed important to treat it as such with a view of defeating or obstructing the present application.

The 'orerflow!n¿ of a spring by the, erection oía mill dam, is a proper subject of consideration in determining upon the propriety of permitting its erection: (.lÉibb 377; ZA.K.Maii ¿hail, 328.)

It appears that when the jury acted under the writ of ad quod damnum, the place claimed as a spring was covered by the creek, which was then flush, and it does not appear that McDougle, who lived in the State of Tennessee, and at some miles distant from the premises in question, had any notice either of the application or of the holding of the inquest, until after the writ was returned. These facts are only important as tending to show that the interests, of McDougle may not have been fairly presented to the jury, or fully considered by them, and thus to free the question as to the extent of the injury done to him in respect to his spring and dam and mill privilege, from the weight of any inference which might be drawn from the silence of the inquest in relation to it.

The principal question in the case is, whether the failure of McDougle, for near two years, to commence the re-building of his mill, and his declarations previous to Clark’s applying for the privilege, importing that he did not intend to rebuild, authorized the County Court to disregard.entirely, both his claim of privilege and his dam and mill, as they actually existed before and at the time •of granting the .privilege to Clark. The 6th section of [450]*450the statute regulating this subject, (2 Stat. Law, 1214.-15,) after enumerating several inquiries which shall be a ground for refusing leave to build a mill and dam, puts the determination of the question, in the absence of these inquiries, upon the reasonableness, under all the existing circumstances, of granting or refusing the leave asked. Among the circumstances to be considered and compared in coming to a conclusion, the existance and degree of public necessity or convenience demanding the erection of a mill as proposed, is doubtless entitled to the first place: and although the particular advantage of the individual making the application, is not to be regarded as a motive for action by the Court, the injury to be occasion-1 ed to other individuals is to be considered. And in proportion to the magnitude of such injury, so must be the urgency of the public exigency, to justify the Court in inflicting the injury, which even then cannot be properly authorized except on the terms of making compensation. Hence, although the destruction of a spring used for domestic purposes, is notone of the injuries on which the statute grounds its prohibitions, it has been decided that such an objection should prevail in defeating an application for leave to build a mill, &c., unless the public necessity imperiously require it, and that even in that case compensation should be made: (1 Bibb, 379; 3 A, K. Marshall, 328.)

Theexistencé of a mill, tho’ without regular establishment near to a proposed mill dam, and which will be destroyed or materially injured, is a subject of consideration in determining upon the propriety of permitting a new dam to be built.

[450]*450In this case we may say, that although the convenience of the immediate neighborhood would doubtless be promoted by the erection of a good mill at the proposed site, in case there was not one at the old site of McDougle’s mill, yet there is shown to be such a number of mills within convenient distance around, that we do not think the necessities or even convenience of the public is so far involved as to be entitled to any very decisive effect in determining the question, and certainly not to such an extent as to require the infliction of serious injury upon any individual.

But it is said in effect, that the dam and mill of Mc-Dougle, besides being of little or no value, exist without any right on his part, and do not answer the public requirements, and that, consequently, their actual existence [451]*451should form no obstacle to the grant of a mill to another, and their actual destruction' should, in law, be regarded as inflicting no injury on McDougle. If the premises of this argument were true, they would be far from proving that the actual existence of a mill and dam within a hundred yards of the proposed erection, (though not coming up to the wishes of the neighbors,) and their certain destruction by the dam proposed, are not circumstances affecting the reasonableness of the proposition for a new mill. They are circumstances entitled to weight upon the question, because on the one hand they actually supply, to some extent, the wants and conveniences of the public, and so far diminish the force of any requistion fora new mill, and on the other, they constitute an actual interest which will be injuriously affected by the new dam, and which, therefore, should not be disregarded.

—Such should be the case, whether the will had been legally established or enjoyed for a great length of time.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ky. 448, 7 B. Mon. 448, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdougle-v-clark-kyctapp-1847.