New York City v. Pine

185 U.S. 93, 22 S. Ct. 592, 46 L. Ed. 820, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2243
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 7, 1902
Docket491
StatusPublished
Cited by114 cases

This text of 185 U.S. 93 (New York City v. Pine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York City v. Pine, 185 U.S. 93, 22 S. Ct. 592, 46 L. Ed. 820, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2243 (1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the above statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

Many interesting questions are involved in this case, but we think it unnecessary for the present at least to decide more than one. We assume, without deciding, that, as found by the Circuit Court, the plaintiffs will suffer substantial damage by the proposed diversion of the water of the West Branch. Also, without deciding, we assume that, although the West Branch above the dam and all the sources of supply of water to that branch are within the limits of the State of New York, it has no power to appropriate such water or prevent its natural flow through its accustomed channel into the State of .Connecticut; that the plaintiffs have a legal right to the natural flow of the water through their farms in the State of Connecticut and cannot be deprived of that right by and for the benefit of the city of New York by any legal proceedings either in Connecticut or New York; and that a court of equity, at the instance of the plaintiffs, at the inception and before any action had been *97 taken by the city of New York, would have restrained all interference with such natural flow of the water.

Notwithstanding these assumptions we are of opinion that the decree ought not to stand, and for these reasons: This is not a case between two individuals in which is involved simply the pecuniary interests of the respective parties. On the one side are two individuals claiming that their property rights are infringed — rights which can be measured in money, and that not a large sum; on the other, a municipality undertaking a large work with a view of supplying many of its citizens with one of the necessities of life. According to the averments in the bill the city had been engaged in this work for two years and had nearly completed the dam. While the near completion is denied in the answer there is no denial of the time during which the city had been engaged in the work, and it stands as an admitted fact that for two years prior to the commencement of this suit the work had been under way. It is true the testimony discloses that the plaintiffs and the city had been trying to agree upon the amount of compensation, but that shows that the plaintiffs were seeking compensation for the injuries they would sustain, and were not insisting upon their alleged right to an abandonment of the work. It is one thing to state a right and proffer a waiver thereof for compensation and an entirely different thing to state the same right and demand that, it should be respected. In the latter case the defendant acts at his peril. In the former he may well assume that payment of a just compensation will be accepted in lieu of the right. In the latter the plaintiff holds out the single question of the validity and extent of the right; in the former he presents the right as the foundation of a claim for compensation, and his threat to enforce the right if compensation is not made is simply a club to compel payment of the sum he deems the measure of his damages. '.Furtner, the testimony shows that the city was settling with other parties similarly situated, and paying out-large sums of money for the damages such parties would sustain. So, it is-not strange that the city acted on the assumption that the only matter to be determined was the amouut of the compensation.

*98 If the plaintiffs had intended to insist upon the strict legal rights (which for the purposes of this case we assume they possessed), they should have ■ commenced at once, and before the city had gone to expense, to restrain any work by it. It would be inequitable to permit them to carry on negotiations with a view to compénsation until the city had gone tcrsuch great expense, and then, failing to agree upon the compensation, fall back .upon the alleged absolute right to prevent the work. If they had intended to rest upon such right and had commenced proceedings at once, the city might have concluded to abandon the proposed undertaking and seek its water supplies in some other direction. If this injunction -is permitted to stand the city must pay whatever the plaintiffs see fit to demand, however extortionate that demand may be, or else abandon the work and lose the money it has expended. While we do not mean to intimate that the plaintiffs would make an extortionate demand, we do hold that equity will not place them in a position where they can enforce one.

The time at which parties invoke the aid of a court of equity is often a significant factor in determining the extent of their rights. Vigilantibus non dormientibus agüitas subvenit is a maxim of equity. As said by Pomerby, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 1, sec. 418, the principle embodied in this maxim “operates throughout the entire remedial portion of equity jurisprudence, but rather as furnishing a most important rule controlling and restraining the courts in the administration of all kinds of relief, than as being the source of any particular and distinctive doctrines of the jurisprudence. . . . The principle thus used as a practical rule controlling and restricting the award- of reliefs is designed to promote diligence on the part of suitors.”

In Smith v. Clay, 3 Brown Ch. 639, note, Lord Camden said: “ A court of equity, which is never active in relief against conscience or public convenience, has always refused its aid to stale demands, where the party has slept upon his rights,, and acquiesced for a great length of time. Nothing can call forth this court into activity but conscience, good faith and reasonable diligence.”

*99 It was said by Circuit Judge Shipman, in deciding this case:

“ If a court of equity has power in any case by decree to ascertain and order the payment of damages by decree of injunction in the alternative, a court of equity will not exercise such power where the- defendant has committed a permanent injury without authority of law and without pretense of right to take and retain the property.”

However true that proposition may be generally when invoked at the. inception and before any work has been done, We think it not applicable'-when the plaintiffs have waited until the work has been progressing for two years and the defendant has expended a large sum of money thereon. As declared by Lord Camden, in the quotation just made, a court of equity is never active in relief against public convenience.

It may be not amiss to notice some of-the cases in which the effect of time upon a suit in equity has been the subject of discussion. In Galliher v. Cadwell, 145 U. S. 368, was considered the general subject of laches. Many authorities were cited and reviewed, and it was said (p. 313):

But it is unnecessary to multiply cases. They all proceed upon the theory that laches is not 1 ike-limitation, a mere matter of time ; but principally a question of the inequity of permitting the claim to be enforced — an inequity founded upon some change in the condition or relations of the property or the parties.”

In Roberts v. Northern Pacific Railroad, 158 U. S.

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Bluebook (online)
185 U.S. 93, 22 S. Ct. 592, 46 L. Ed. 820, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-city-v-pine-scotus-1902.