Pugh v. . Wheeler

19 N.C. 50
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 19 N.C. 50 (Pugh v. . Wheeler) 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
Pugh v. . Wheeler, 19 N.C. 50 (N.C. 1836).

Opinion

Ruffin, Chief Justice,

after stating the case, as above, proceeded: — The point principally insisted on for the defendants is, that the plaintiffs could not recover for the injury to their new machinery. It has not been denied *53 here, that a party cannot obstruct a stream below, so as to prevent the water from escaping, as it naturally would, and thereby pour it back upon the land or mill of another, simply, because those consequences do not exist at all times, ordinarily, but only when the stream is swollen. We think it clear, that circumstance can only affect the quantum of damage, and does not excuse the party altogether. One has the right at no time to prevent the water flowing from the land of a proprietor above, as it has usually done, more than the proprietor above has the right to divert the stream, so as to prevent it from flowing to him below. The question, in any state of the stream, is, whether a person owning land on it, and thereby entitled to certain beneficial uses of the water, has been deprived, by means of the acts of another, of some' of those uses which, but for those acts, he would enjoy in that particular state of the stream. If so, he has sustained some injury, and is entitled to recover the damages, although they be not so great, as if the injury were more frequent, or of longer duration.

when the spectively as in the preserip-tive rights, the applica *54 tion of the water of a stream to some particular and useful purpose, is an appropriation of it, which gives the right to the perpetual use of it in the same way, against all persons who may not have previously applied it to some other use inconsistent therewith.

*53 The proposition of the defendants’ counsel in this court, rests on the facts, that although the plaintiffs’ mill might be older than the defendants’, yet their improvements were subsequent to the' erection of the defendants’ mill; and, therefore, the defendants are not responsible for the inefficiency or inutility of those improvements. It is contended, that the application of the water of a stream to some particular and useful purpose, is an appropriation of it, which gives the right to the perpetual use of it in the same way, against all persons who may not have previously applied it to some other use inconsistent therewith. In other words, that running water is piiblici juris, and that the first use of it gives the better title to it.

There are dicta in the cases cited by the defendants’ counsel, to give colour to his position, and we take the position itself to be strictly true, when the parties claim respectively upon their possession. He who claims a thing, because he has possessed or used it in a particular way, can claim to use it longer, in no other. The argu-men t of the counsel, however, assumes, that the right to *54 water can be acquired only by use; and therein, we think, consists its error. The dicta on which he relies • had reference to ,the cases of prescriptive title, or where • the party had only the rights of a possessor. But it is not true, that the right to water is acquired only by its use, and that it cannot exist independent of any particular use of it. That doctrine is correctly applied- to the air and to the sea, or such bodies of water, as from their immensity, cannot be appropriated by individuals, or ought to be kept as common highways for the constant uses of the country, and the enjoyment of all men. In such cases, particular persons cannot acquire a right— that is, a several and exclusive right, by use or any other means. But with smaller streams it is otherwise. They may still be publici juris, so far as to allow all persons to drink the water, and the like; and also, so far as to prevent a person to whose land it comes from thus consuming it entirely, by applying it to other purposes than those for which it is conceded to every one — ad lavandum et potandum,,- as to divert it or corrupt it. But while the use of running water in such streams is thus reserved to all men, for the purposes of preserving life and rendering existence comfortable, to only a very few is any other use reasonable; and as to those few only ought it therefore to be legal. Its use, for instance, in propelling machinery, cannot be obtained by any person, but one who owns the land which the water covers, or which forms its panics, or by one to whom such proprietor grants it; because it is physically impossible to get the water in any other way. But the owners of the land may have those uses of it; and as they are beneficial uses — beneficial, not only as sources of private gain, but therein also of public utility —it is reasonable, and ought therefore to be lawful, that the owners of the land should, as such, be entitled to the advantage of all those profitable uses of the water, which do not afifect it as the aliment pi-ovided by nature to nourish animal life. We conceive, therefore, that it is the clear doctrine of the common law, that all the owners of land through which a stream, not navigable, runs, may apply it to the purposes of profit. The rights claimed by *55 these defendants themselves have no other foundation. The only question, then, is, what are the rights of the owners above and below on a stream, as against each other ? The defendants say, that such one of the owners as may first apply the water to any particular purpose, gains thereby, and immediately, the exclusive right to that use of the water. That is true, in this sense, that any other proprietor, above or below, cannot do any act whereby that particular enjoyment would be impaired, without answering for the damages which are occasioned by the loss of the particular enjoyment. Whereas before the particular application of the water to that purpose, the damages would not have included that possible application of the. water, but been confined to the uses then subsisting. But to render the proposition even thus far true, the use supposed must be a legitimate one; that is, it must not interfere with any previously existing right in another proprietor; for usurpation does not justify itself. If one build a mill on a stream, and a person above divert the water, the owner of the mill may recover for the injury to the mill, although before he built he could only recover for the natural uses of the water, as needed for his family, his cattle, and irrigation. But if, instead of building a mill, he had diverted the stream itself, he cannot justify it against a proprietor below, upon the ground, that he had thus made an artificial use of the water, before the other had made any such application of it. The truth is, that every owner of land on a stream necessarily and at all times is using water running through it — if in no other manner, in the fertility it imparts to his land, and the increase in the value of it.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.C. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pugh-v-wheeler-nc-1836.