Radcliff's Executors v. . Mayor, C. of Brooklyn

4 N.Y. 195
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by193 cases

This text of 4 N.Y. 195 (Radcliff's Executors v. . Mayor, C. of Brooklyn) 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
Radcliff's Executors v. . Mayor, C. of Brooklyn, 4 N.Y. 195 (N.Y. 1850).

Opinion

Bronson, Ch. J.

The common council of the city of Brooklyn has ample authority to lay out, open, grade, level and pave streets within the city. When lands are taken for a street, the owner is to be paid his damages, to be assessed by commissioners. But there is no provision for paying consequential damages, or such as may result to persons whose lands are not taken. (Stat. 1833, p. 499, §§ 1, 2, 16 ; id. 1838, p. 119, §§ 1, 2.) Such is my construction of the statutes touching the question.

Furman-street lying west of and adjoining the testator’s premises, had been laid out prior to the digging of which the plaintiffs complain; but it had not then been opened or used as *198 [198] a highway. The digging was done in the site of the street for the purpose of grading and levelling the same for public use. There was no excavation or any other act done by the defendants in or upon the testator’s land. But in consequence of digging away the bank in the site of the street, which was a natural support of the testator’s land, a portion of his premises fell into the street, and he suffered damage. There is no charge that the defendants acted maliciously; nor do the pleadings impute to them any want of skill or care in doing the work. The defendants are a public corporation ; and the act in question was done for the benefit of the public, and under ample authority, if the legislature had power to grant the authority, without providing for the payment of such consequential damages as have fallen upon the testator. Our constitution provides that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. But I am not aware that this, or any similar, provision in the constitutions of other states, has ever been held applicable to a case like this. Although the testator’s property has suffered damage, I find no precedent for saying that it has been “ taken for public use,” within the meaning of the constitution.

This short view is enough, perhaps, to dispose of the case. But the wide range of discussion at the bar makes it proper to consider the matter more at large. As no question has been made on that subject, we must assume that the defendants had acquired the title to the lands in the site of the street, in the forms prescribed by law. In levelling and grading the street, they were at work in their own land, doing a lawful act for a lawful purpose. They did not touch the testator’s property; and the question is, whether the damage which resulted to him in consequence of grading the street, must not be regarded as damnum absque injuria. The maxim sic utere tuo ui alienum non Icedas, is not of universal application ; for, as a general rule, a man who exercises proper care and skill may do what he will with his own property. He may not, however, under color of enjoying his own, set up a nuisance which deprives another of [199] the enjoyment of his property. Hor can he rightfully *199 enter or cast any thing on the land of another, unless he have a license from the owner, or an authority in Iaw for doing the act. And the absence of a bad motive will not save him from an .action. Thus, if one having a hedge on his own land adjoining another’s close cut the thorns, and they fall against his will, on his neighbor’s land, from which he removes them as soon as possible, he may be treated as a trespasser. And if he lop a tree, and the boughs fall against his will on the land of another; or if in building his house a piece of timber fall on the house of his neighbor; or if, through fear of his life by reason of threats, he enter the house of another and carry away his property ; in all these cases an action lies. (Lambert v. Bessey, T. Raymond's Rep. 421.) So, too, if in blasting rocks for the lawful purpose of making a canal in his own land, fragments of the rock fall on the house or land of his neighbor, an action will lie. (Hay v. The Cohoes Company, and Tremain v. The Same, 2 Comst. 159, 163.) Nearly allied to this is the common case of building a dam in one’s own land, which throws back the water on the . land or machinery of one higher up the stream ; which is an actionable injury. And one can not justify placing a spout on his house, which throws the water on the land of his neighbor. And though a man may use the water of a stream while it is passing through his land, he can not rightfully divert the water from the land of another lower down the stream ; nor can the water be taken to supply a city or town, without making compensation to those who are thus deprived of its use. (Gardner v. Village of Newburgh, 2 John. Ch. 162.) There is another class of cases of a somewhat different character, where a man must answer for the*consequences of an act lawful in itself, because it was done in so negligent or unskilful a manner as to cause an injury to another. Vaughan v. Menlove, (3 Bing. N. C. 468,) is a strong example of the kind. The defendant was held liable for constructing a hay-rick on the extremity of bis land in so negligent a manner that spontaneous ignition followed, and the plaintiff’s cottage was destroyed. And where public officers, having authority to construct and repair streets, make a culvert to pass a stream of water in so unskilful and im- [200] *200 proper a manner as to cause an injury to another by the choking of the culvert, they must answer in damages. Rochester White Lead Company v. The City of Rochester, (3 Comst. 463.) These casés are enough to exemplify the rule that a man must so exercise á lawful authority, and so enjoy his own property, as not to injure the property of another.

But a man may do many things under a lawful authority, or in his own land, which may result in an injury to the property of others, without being answerable for the consequences. Indeed, an act done under lawful authority, if done in a proper manner, can never subject the party to an action, whatever consequences may follow. Nor will a man be answerable for the consequences of enjoying his own property in the way such property is usually enjoyed, unless an injury has resulted to another from the want of proper care or skill on his part. In the cases already put, where an action will lie, the party either went beyond the enjoyment of his own property, and entered or cast something on the land of his neighbor; or he diverted a stream of water from the land of his neighbor, without having a title to any thing more than the usufruct; or else he used his own property in such a negligent and improper manner as to cause an injury to another.

Let us now see what a man may do in the enjoyment of his own property, without being answerable to others for consequential damages—always assuming that he acts with proper care and skill. He may set fire to his fallow-ground; and though the fire run into and burn the woodland of his neighbor, no action will lie. (Clarke v. Foot, 8 John. 421.) He may open and work a coal mine in his own land, though it injure the house which another has built at the extremity of his land. (Patridge v. Scott, 3 Mees.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radcliffs-executors-v-mayor-c-of-brooklyn-ny-1850.