McLaughlin v. Hope Manufacturing Co.

9 S.E. 307, 103 N.C. 100
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 307 (McLaughlin v. Hope Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLaughlin v. Hope Manufacturing Co., 9 S.E. 307, 103 N.C. 100 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

*101 Davis, J.

It is alleged that the defendant is an incorporated company, engaged in the manufacture of warps, yarns, plaids, etc., in the county of Cumberland, and that said company has commenced the erection of a large factory on the waters of Rockfish Creek, in said county; that the plaintiff and other citizens of Cumberland County have, for a great many years, used the waters of said creek for the purpose of transporting produce, such as rosin, timber, turpentine, etc., to market; that for many years the stream'was “regularly worked by overseers duly appointed to clear the same of obstructions,” and that it was made “a navigable stream by public enactment of the General Assembly of North Carolina,” and, by long-continüed and uninterrupted use by the public, the public have acquired the privilege and paramount right to the free and uninterrupted use of its waters, as a navigable stream, for the transportation of produce. It is further alleged, that the defendant company is erecting a dam across said stream, claiming that it has the right so to do, upon “the erection of slopes, slips or locks of the dimensions of 12x30 bet,” which are totally inadequate for the purpose of transportation; that the construction of said dam and locks will obstruct the navigation “of said waters, and deprive the plaintiff and all other citizens of their long use and right of navigation of said stream, and the same, if allowed by the' courts, or persisted in by the defendant, will be a nuisance to the public and people who have a right to the navigation of said waters, and work irreparable damage to the plaintiff and all others interested ”; that the plaintiff had no notice of the intention of the defendant to build the dam so as to obstruct the navigation of said creek until after the same had been commenced, and made known to the defendant his complaint as soon as he heard of it.

The plaintiff asks that the defendant be enjoined, etc.

The action was commenced November 20, 1888.

*102 By chapter 197, Acts of 1848-49, the Courts of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of the counties of Robeson and Cumberland are authorized to appoint overseers, with an allotment of hands, “to clear out and render navigable Big Rockfish Creek, in said counties.” By section three of this act, it is made unlawful and indictable to obstruct the free navigation of said creek, and section four provides that all owners of da,ms across said stream “ shall cause to be constructed, and kept open and in good repair, good and sufficient slopes for the free passage of all rafts of .lumber, timber, turpentine and other products.”

The plaintiff offered the record of the County Court of Robeson County, January Term, 1845, showing the appointment of overseers of Rockfish Creek, and affidavits tending to show that it was under the charge of overseers in the county of Robeson down to the beginning of the late war; that no work has been done by authority of law since the beginning of the war.

The plaintiff also offered numerous affidavits tending to show that Rockfish Creek has been used by the public for many years — as many as forty, fifty and fifty-five years, within the knowledge of witnesses, and by reputation as many as one hundred years; and some of the affidavits tend to show that the lock erected at the dam of defendant is not sufficient^ long to permit the shipment of rosin, tar, etc., without serious loss to shippers.

The defendant company answers, at great length, and sets out the circumstances under which the dam in question was erected. ' '

The defendant filed, as appears from the record, a petition to the Board of Commissioners of Cumberland County, on the first Monday in February, 1888, as follows:

“The petition of the Hope Mills Manufacturing Company respectfully represents that it is desirous of erecting a dam across Big Rockfish Creek, in the county of Cumberland, on *103 the lands of the petitioner, adjoining the lands of J. W. Emmett and others, for the purpose of erecting the necessary buildings and machinery for a cotton factory.
That your petitioner is informed and believes that for many years last past said Big Roclcfish Creek has not had overseers appointed nor hands assigned to work the same, under the provisions of chapter 56, vol. 2, The Code of North Carolina,.and said creek has not for a long time been treated as a stream within the provisions of said chapter.
“ But as your petitioner proposes to expend large'sums of money in the erection of said dam and buildings and machinery, before doing so, and out of abundant caution, your petitioner desires an expression of the sense of your honorable Board, as to the object contemplated, and whether or not the erection of the proposed dam across said Big Rock-fish Creek meets with your approval.
That your petitioner requests, in case the erection of said dam shall meet with your approval, that your body shall appoint a committee, under the provisions of sections 3710, 3712, 3713 and 3714 of ch. 56, vol. 2, The Code, aforesaid, clothed with the duty of determining whether any gates or slopes in said dam are necessary, and, if so, the plan, dimensions and construction of the same, to the end that your petitioner may be apprised beforehand as to what wild be required, and that all provisions of law in that behalf may be observed by your petitioner, and all controversy relating to the same obviated in the outset.”

That the petition of said corporation was granted by the unanimous vote of the Board of Commissioners, and the following resolutions unanimously adopted, viz.:

Resolved, that the erection of a dam across Big Roclifish by the Hope Mills Manufacturing Company, on the lands of said company, adjoining the lands of J. W. Emmett and others, meets with the approval of this Board.
*104 Resolved, that A. B. Williams, Jas. D. McNeill and John Blue be appointed commissioners to ascertain whether or not gates and slopes are necessary in said dam, and, if so, the plan and dimensions, of the same, giving hereby to said commissioners all legal authority and power relating to the same provided in chapter 56, vol. 2, of The Code.”

It appears that when the petition was filed and acted upon, manjr people from different parts of the county were in the commissioners’ office, and in and about the courthouse; that Wm. Aldeman, a resident near Big Rockfish Creek, discussed the subject-matter of the petition, in behalf of turpentine and timber men, who used said stream for rafting, etc., and, at his suggestion, one of the commissioners was appointed by the board, on account of his residence in that part of the county, to represent them. It further appears that the action of the Board of Commissioners was published in the Fayetteville Observer,

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 307, 103 N.C. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-hope-manufacturing-co-nc-1889.