Rhodes v. Whitehead

27 Tex. 304
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 27 Tex. 304 (Rhodes v. Whitehead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhodes v. Whitehead, 27 Tex. 304 (Tex. 1863).

Opinion

Moore, J.

This is a suit by the plaintiff in error, Rhodes, to recover damages occasioned by a dam erected by the defendants across the San Antonio river, and to abate the same as a nuisance. The jury were instructed by the court that if the defendants, or those under whom they claimed, had received authority, from those [309]*309authorized by the former government, previous to the grant of the land claimed by the plaintiff, to erect near the site of the present one a dam of equal height with that constructed by the defendants, the plaintiff could only recover by showing that the land submerged by the present dam had been claimed by himself, or those under whom he derives his title, free from any right of the defendants, or those under whom they claim title, to submerge said land; and that this right on the part of the plaintiff, or his vendors, had been claimed and exercised for ten years before the erection of the present dam. And, also, that the breaking down of the former dam, and the consequent receding of the river, and laying bare a strip of land along the margin of the stream, gave no right to the plaintiff, or his vendors, to use this strip of land free from the right of the defendants to raise the river by the reconstruction of the dam. But to give the plaintiff the legal right to use this strip of land adversely to the right of the defendants, his claim to use or enjoy it in that manner must have been made openly for the term of ten years, or it must have been evidenced by such a possession or construction of improvements upon the whole or a part of it, for ten years, as would evidence an intention of permanent occupation adverse to the right claimed by the defendants to raise the river.

Generally speaking, every riparian proprietor is entitled to the land to the middle of the stream, or, as it is commonly expressed, usque ad fiiem aquce. As the owner of the land, he has, prima facie, the right to the use of the water flowing over it, in its natural current, without diminution or obstruction. He has this right, however, only in common with every other proprietor. But none of them have a property in the water itself, for, like the air, it cannot be appropriated as the exclusive property of any one; but each of them may simply use it while it passes along. There is, with reference to it, a perfect equality of right among all the proprietors. It is a thing common to all, the consequence of which is, that one of them cannot use it to the prejudice of another. (Tyler v. Wilkerson, 4 Mason, C. C. Reps., 400.) The water power,” it has been said, “ to which the riparian owner is entitled, consists in the fall of the stream, when in its natural state, as it passes [310]*310through his land, or along the boundary of it; or, in other words, it consists in the difference of level between the surface where the stream first touches his land, and the surface where it leaves it. (McCalmont v. Whitaker, 3 Rawle, 84.)

Aqua currit et debet currere ut currere solebat, is a maxim no less of the civil than the common law. (1 Kauf., Mack. Civil Law, 305, note b.) So, also, it is said, in the law of Scotland, in conformity with the civil law, that although a proprietor may use the water while within his own premises, he cannot alter its level, either where it enters, or where it leaves his property. (Bell’s Law of Scot., 691.)

(It may be admitted that the purpose of irrigation is one of the natural uses, such as thirst of people and cattle, and household purposes, which must absolutely be supplied; the appropriation of the water for this purpose would, therefore, afford no ground of complaint by the lower proprietors, if it were entirely consumed. (Evans v. Merriweather, 3 Scam., 496.) And the momentum of the stream may be resorted to as a power for making it available, or it may be turned by a proprietor on his own land by a dam, or by any other means which he may find appropriate for the purpose. Yet, unless he has acquired the right of doing so by grant, license, or such adverse possession as will give him the right by prescription, he cannot do it in a manner that will unreasonably detain the water, not consumed, from the riparian owners below, or throw it back beyond the line where it passes from the land of the owner above him. Eor every party must exercise his own rights, and use his own property in such a manner as shall not cause detriment to that of another. Hence, every injury to a water course, as by improperly diverting it, and every injury by means of a water course, by throwing the water back upon the land of another above, is repugnant to this principle, and is a species of tort denominated a nuisance, for which a party is entitled to redress by an action in which he shall recover damages, and that such nuisance shall be abated, or he may enter on the land of the other and abate it himself.

We have seen that the instructions given by the court required the jury, in effect, if those under whom the defendants claimed, [311]*311had acquired by grant or prescription an incorporeal hereditament or servitude upon the land of the plaintiff previous to its grant by the government, to find a verdict in favor of the defendants,, unless the plaintiff, or those under whom he claimed, had barred such right by acts of adverse possession, or by denial for more than ten years that his land was subject to the right claimed by the defendants. The instructions, it will be observed, place rights of this character, whether acquired by express deed or grant, or as an implied grant from secondary evidence, or from prescription by reason of the length of time of their use or enjoyment, in the same category. The rule laid down by the court to guide the jury in determining whether the servitude claimed by the defendants, if acquired by prescription, had been lost, is obviously, if not wholly unsupported by authority, contrary to the great weight and number both of the adjudged cases and elementary authors. (3 Campb., 514; Doe v. Hilder, 2 B. & Ald., 791; Wright v. Freeman, 5 H. & John., 467; Hoffman v. Savage, 15 Mass., 130; Drewitt v. Sheard, 7 C. & Payne, 465; Corning v. Gould, 16 Wend, 531; Dyer v. Dupui, 5 Whart., 584; Moore v. Rawson, 3 B. & Cress., 332; Taylor v. Hampton, 4 McCord, 96.)

The doctrine of the charge is perhaps sustained with reference to such rights, when created by express written deed or grant. (3 Kent, 448; 2 Evans’ Poth., 136.) And it has, also, been said to be the rule of the latter Roman law, that rights acquired by grant are not lost by their non-exercise, unless the servient thing acquires its freedom from the servitude by prescription, or a third party acquires the thing as a free property by prescription. Though the better opinion seems to be that, in respect to servitudes such as the present one, they are governed by a different rule. (1 Kauf. Mack. Civil Law, 351, and note c.)

It is contended that on principle, servitudes, or incorporeal hereditaments, whether proved by express grant or prescription,, should be regarded as of equal effect and validity. The servitude or easement upon the property of another is acquired by prescription, because the length of time during which it has been enjoyed becomes presumpdo juris et de jure of an original grant. And that the grant thus conclusively established, must be [312]*312regarded as vesting as complete and perfect a right, as if the express grant of which it serves as evidence was itself before the court.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Tex. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-whitehead-tex-1863.