Peck v. . Goodberlett

16 N.E. 350, 109 N.Y. 180, 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 182, 64 Sickels 180, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 718
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 10, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 16 N.E. 350 (Peck v. . Goodberlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peck v. . Goodberlett, 16 N.E. 350, 109 N.Y. 180, 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 182, 64 Sickels 180, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 718 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

The plaintiff and defendant were owners of adjoining farms. The south line of the plaintiff’s, was the north line of the defendant’s farm, and having regard to the general slope or inclination of the land forming the premises, the plaintiff’s farm was below and the defendant’s farm above. The plaintiff was, therefore, so situated that his land must receive such surface-water as at any time flowed naturally from the defendant’s land northerly, and for this he evidently could have no cause of action. His complaint, as set forth in the pleadings, is of a different character, viz., that, prior to 1876, a portion of the defendant’s farm consisted of a marsh or swale from which the water flowed naturally in an easterly direction to the lands of one Wellman, and thence northerly to a certain creek, and so northerly along the east line of the plaintiff’s land; that a ridge or knoll between the plaintiff’s south line and the defendant’s swale or marsh made it impossible for water to flow therefrom across the south line of the plaintiff, but, in that year, he charges that the defendant “ wrongfully, and for the purpose of draining his land and his swale or marsh, dug and opened artificial ditches,” from and across his land, and from his swale or marsh, northwardly through the ridge to the plaintiff’s south line, and there “wrongfully entered and trespassed upon the plaintiff’s farm and dug and continued the ditches “ from his own land into the plaintiff’s farm,” and so diverted the water from the swale or marsh of defendant, “from its natural channels into and upon the plaintiff’s farm,” across the south line thereof, thereby flooding with water and rendering twenty-five acres of it unfit for use *185 and cultivation, and so flooding his wood lot that he cannot get wood from, it as before, and his barn-yard so that it is impassable and unfit for use. His prayer is for an injunction against keeping open these ditches, or “ diverting the water from its natural channels into and upon the plaintiff’s land,” and that he have from the defendant $500 damages. A very clear case was thus stated for equitable relief. A preliminary injunction order, reciting the diversion of water from its natural channel as the cause of action, and restraining it, was granted, but afterwards so modified as to apply only to what is known as the short ditch, and which appears to run from the swale to a long ditch, the latter extending to the south line of plaintiff’s land.

The defendant’s answer denied the incriminating averments of the conrplaint and set up that the ditches made by him followed the natural depressions in his land, and were made in the course of ordinary improvement and cultivation of his land, in good faith, and without any intention on the part of the defendant to injure the plaintiff or trespass upon his lands; that they do not change the natural course of surface-water over said land, nor sensibly concentrate it, nor increase its rush or flow upon the plaintiff’s lands or the lands occupied by him.

The issues so made were sent to a referee for trial, and after the fullest examination of witnesses he found in favor of the defendant and dismissed the complaint. Upon appeal to the General Term the court accepted the findings of fact as correctly made, but reversed the judgment which followed the referee’s conclusion of law, because, in their opinion, it, in effect, erroneously adjudged that the acts of the defendant, as found by the referee, were proper and justifiable and so did not constitute a wrong.

It is, of course, obvious that the questions raised by the pleadings were purely questions of fact, and the referee’s answers to those questions having been adopted and approved by the General Term, the judgment of reversal and granting *186 a new trial not showing that the judgment on the findings was reversed on questions of fact, the case is open to review in this court on questions of law simply, and we have only to see whether any error is disclosed in the referee’s conclusions, assuming the facts to be as stated in his decision or upon the various rulings upon objections raised by the defendant during the trial It is quite beyond our province, therefore, to follow the learned counsel for the respondent in his careful and elaborate examination of the testimony, for whatever might be our own opinion concerning it, we should be unable, in any lawful exercise of our appellate power, to go beyond the limitations within which the courts below agree in confining the effect of the testimony.

The findings of the referee show that the marsh or swale referred to in the complaint is a small spot of ground, some two or three rods in width, which, at the time defendant became the purchaser of said farm, was somewhat lower than the land immediately surrounding it, so that in the spring of the year surface-water would collect there, and not pass off as rapidly as from other portions of the premises; that a short distance to the west of this spot, and running in a northerly direction up to the plaintiff’s south line, and for a short distance into his wood lot, is a natural depression in the land about twenty-five feet in width, and that, from time immemorial, the surface-water caused by rain" and melting snow have flowed northerly from said south ridge until they have reached the ridge, running north and south on Well-man’s land, when they have divided, a portion thereof passing off towards the north-east into Basse’s creek, and the other portion in a north-westerly direction into this low spot on defendant’s land, and from thence into and through said depression in the ground northerly into plaintiff’s wood lot, then into a ditch, running east and west on plaintiff’s land, and from said ditch in a north-easterly direction, until they reached the aforementioned Basse’s creek; that when the defendant purchased his farm in 1872, the said north lot was in a wild, uncultivated state, and he shortly *187 thereafter began to improve the same, and to that end he removed stumps, filled up low places, including this spot on the eastern boundary, and did whatever was necessary and proper to be done in order to bring it into a state of productiveness.

That, in cultivating said lot, the defendant plowed the same, north and south in lands, ten or fourteen paces wide, leaving a dead-furrow between these lands, and also in such a manner as to leave a dead-furrow through the said depression, and along his east line next to the Wellman wood-lot, which furrows were from six to eight inches deep, and he also planted and sowed said lot, including said low land and dead-furrows, with potatoes, corn, oats and other crops; that he plowed and cultivated said land in the usual and proper manner, and as it was customary for lands to be plowed and cultivated in that particular locality, and that in so plowing and cultivating said lands he had in mind the ordinary flow of surface-water thereon.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kennedy v. Hoog, Inc.
48 Misc. 2d 107 (New York Supreme Court, 1965)
Mallon v. City of Long Beach
330 P.2d 423 (California Court of Appeal, 1958)
In re the Estate of Galewitz
3 A.D.2d 280 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1957)
State ex rel. Halvorson v. Simpson
49 N.W.2d 790 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1951)
Henry S. Grinde Corporation v. Klindworth
44 N.W.2d 417 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1950)
Hudson v. Herschbach Drilling Co.
128 P.2d 1044 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1942)
Springer Transfer Co. v. City of Albuquerque
103 P.2d 129 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1940)
Garmany v. Southern Ry. Co.
149 S.E. 765 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1929)
Oliver v. City of Cincinnati
12 Ohio App. 432 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1919)
McCabe v. Guaranty Trust Co. of New York
243 F. 845 (Second Circuit, 1917)
Downey v. National Fire Insurance
87 S.E. 487 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1915)
Jennings v. Bohner
134 N.Y.S. 943 (New York Supreme Court, 1912)
Superior Oil & Gas Co. v. Mehlin
1910 OK 96 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1910)
von Bernuth v. von Bernuth
76 N.J. Eq. 177 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1909)
Hale v. Jenkins
55 Misc. 119 (New York Supreme Court, 1907)
Brown v. Cole
105 N.Y.S. 196 (New York Supreme Court, 1907)
Mayor of Baltimore v. Flack
64 A. 702 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)
Union Bag v. Allen Bros. Co.
107 A.D. 529 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)
Straus v. American Publishers' Ass'n
45 Misc. 251 (New York Supreme Court, 1904)
Riverside Cotton Mills v. Lanier
45 S.E. 875 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.E. 350, 109 N.Y. 180, 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 182, 64 Sickels 180, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peck-v-goodberlett-ny-1888.