Pixley v. . Clark

35 N.Y. 520
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 35 N.Y. 520 (Pixley v. . Clark) 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
Pixley v. . Clark, 35 N.Y. 520 (N.Y. 1866).

Opinion

Peokham, J.

Action for damages for flooding plaintiff’s land. The .defendants purchased of the plaintiff a small strip of land on the borders of the Oriskany creek, in Oneida county. The whole, strip so purchased they occupied by an embankment on that side of the creek, considerably higher than the natural bank, to prevent the overflow of the water caused by raising their dam. They raised their dam at four different times from 1853 to 1857 inclusive, in all fifty-eight and a half inches, so that the dam was then between nine and ten feet high. The embankment was some forty'feet at the base, in and prior to. 1857. The plaintiff owned sixteen acres of valuable land adjoining said embankment. ■ Prior to 1857 it was dry, and bore good crops of almost any kind. In and after 1857, by this raising of the defendants’ dam, this land became saturated with water and nearly worthless. From 1857, this lot, with the exception of a few knolls, “ was saturated with water at all seasons.” “ It had become so saturated with water that no crops could he raised there,” except on a “ few little knolls near a blind-ditch made by plaintiff in 1856, where there was a strip as dry as formerly.” That, on the rest of the lot, cat-tails and the coarse wild grass of the *521 marshes grew where formerly were the dryest places. In 1858 the dam was drawn off for repairs, and so remained for two or three days, and then this land became comparatively dry. The water fell, in a hole dug on it, from twenty to twenty-four inches.

It was proved on the trial that the embankment was well made, and no signs of wet on its outside appeared. From these facts the judge held that the water must have gone through the natural earth in the creek into this land, and not through the embankment, or between it and the natural soil, and nonsuited the plaintiff. On appeal, that nonsuit was sustained by the General Term in the fifth district, and plaintiff appealed to this court.

The single question presented on these facts is, whether the defendants had a right, by raising their dam, to “drown” the plaintiff’s sixteen acres of land, by pressing the water through the natural banks of the stream, or otherwise. If he had, the nonsuit was right—if not, it was erroneous.

The general riile as to flowing or drowning lands is well settled. If riparian proprietors use a water-course in such a manner as to inundate or overflow the lands of another, an action will lie, on the principle, sic viere tvo vt alienvm non Icedas.” So,' if he drown the land of another and rot his grass, an action lies (Angell on Water-Courses, § 330); and he adds: “ The law on this subject, as thus laid down, is so well settled and so obviously just, as never to have been called in question.” Again, he says, that “no single proprietor, without consent, has a right to make use of the flow in such a manner as will be to the prejudice of any other.” (Id., § 840.)

Washburn on Easements reiterates this doctrine. He says, on authority of cases cited, “ that a man may not erect his dam so high as to set back water beyond his neighbor’s line, in its natural and ordinary swellings, in some seasons of the year.” “ A flood ” (not the high water of spring on fall) “ is a different thing: when it does come, it is a visitation of Providence, and the destruction it brings must be borne by those on whom it happens to fall” (Washb. on Ease., ch. 3, § 13, p. 259); and he adds, on the authority of Rex v. Trafford *522 (1 Barn. & Ad., 259), which sustains him, that no man may .change or obstruct, the flow of the water of a stream for his own-benefit to the injury of another,” without being liable to an action; and see 3 Kent, 5th ed., 439, 440, to the same effect; and see Browie v. The Cayuga & Susquehanna Railroad Company (2 Kern., 486); Williams v. Nelson (23 Pick., 142, per Shaw, Ch. J.) Upon this conceded principle of law, the plaintiff may rest his case. The defendants have so raised the water and set it back as to substantially drown or inundate the plaintiff’s land. They have so obstructed -the stream as seriously to injure the sixteen acres of the plaintiff’s land. This action will lie, then, unless defendants can show some exception to the general rule. The burden thereof rests upon them. The defendants answer, first, that a man may do a great many things on his own land that may result in damages to his neighbor, without being liable to an action therefor, and cite Radcliff v. Brooklyn (4 Comst., 195), where Judge Bkonson, after deciding the case before him, assumed to state what a man might do on his own land without being answerable for the consequences. But he did not say that an act of the kind complained of here was not actionable. He says: Building a dam on one’s own land, which throws back the water on the land of one higher up the stream, is an actionable injury.” (p. 199.) That case, and every illustration in it, may be assented to without impairing the right to maintain this action..

The defendants’ counsel says that the defendants had the right to build this dam to use their water power, “ and all that can be legally required of them is that they shall exercise it so as not to injure, directly or unnecessarily, the lands of their neighboralso, he says that “ if one do a lawful act on his bwn premises, he cannot be held for the injurious' consequences, unless it was so done as to constitute actionable negligence. ” These, like many general propositions, are plausible; but, as applied to this case, in the sense they are sought to be used, neither of them is law, and never was. Take the first: Is any such principle found in any case, or stated by any elementary writer, as that you have a right to *523 use your water power, and build a dam for that purpose,- and, if necessary to that end, you may flow and drown your neighbor’s land, provided you do not do so “ unnecessarily ?” That you may do it, so far as is necessary to the full and profitable enjoyment of your water power, even though you flow and destroy his farm %

The other proposition is very similar. Was it ever held or pretended that you might build a dam, and flow another’s land, provided you were guilty of no want of care or skill in its construction % In'fact, the better dam you make—the more skillful and perfect its construction—the more water you restrain and throw back—the greater the damage to the adjoining landowner. These are sound • maxims, applied to many cases, but not to all. The latter may be admitted and applied here. The act of the defendants was lawful, in building their dam, so long as they did not injure their neighbor’s land. The moment they so interfered by their dam as to flow his land to his injury, the act was unlawful. Did any declaration ever aver that the defendant, in building his dam, “ unnecessarily ” threw the water into plaintiff’s land, or that he did so by. carelessly or negligently constructing his dam ? Ho such precedent can be found. The complaint in this case contains no such allegation.

The contrary of these propositions is decided in this court in Tremain v. Cohoes Company

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.Y. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pixley-v-clark-ny-1866.