RUNDLE v. Delaware and Raritan Canal Company

55 U.S. 80, 14 L. Ed. 335, 14 How. 80, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 10, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 55 U.S. 80 (RUNDLE v. Delaware and Raritan Canal Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RUNDLE v. Delaware and Raritan Canal Company, 55 U.S. 80, 14 L. Ed. 335, 14 How. 80, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 430 (1853).

Opinions

Mr. Justice GEJEB,

delivered the opinion of 'the court.

The plaintiffs in error, who were plaintiffs below, are owners [88]*88of certain mills in Pennsylvania, ppposite to the city of Trenton, in New Jersey.' These mills are 'supplied with water from the Delaware River, by means of a dam extending from the Pennsylvania shore to an island lying near and parallel to it, and extending along the rapids to the head of tide water.

The plaintiffs, in their declaration, show title to the property under one-Adam Hoops, who had erected his mill and built a dam in the river previous to the year 1771. In that year, the Provinces of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, respectively, passed acts declaring the River Delaware a common highway for purposes of navigation up and down the same, and mutually appointing commissioners to improve the navigation thereof, with full power and authority to remove any obstructions whatsoever, natural or artificial; and subjecting to fine and imprisonment any person who should set up, repair, or maintain any dam or ■obstruction in the same, provided, “ that nothing herein contained shall give any power or authority to the commissioners herein, appointed, or any of them, to remove, throw down, lower, impair, or in any manner to alter a mill-dam erected by Adam Hoops, Esq., in the said River Delaware, between his plantation and an island in the said river, nearly opposite to Trenton; or any mill-dam erected by any other person or persons in the said river, before the passing of this act, nor to obstruct, or in any manner to hinder the said- Adam Hoops, or such other person or persons,, his or their heirs and assigns, from maintaining, raising, or repairing the said dams respectively, or from taking water out of the said river for the use of the said mills and waterworks erected as aforesaid, and none other.”

The declaration avers, that by these acts of the provincial legislatures, the said Hoops, his heirs and assigns, became entitled. to the free and .uninterrupted enjoyment and privilege of the River Delaware for the use of the said mills,.&c., without diminution or alteration by or from the act of said Provinces, now States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, or any person or persons claiming under them or either of them. Nevertheless, that the defendants erected a dam in said river above plaintiffs’ mills, and dug a canal and diverted the water, to the great injury, &e.

The defendants are a corporation, chartered by New Jersey, for the purpose of - “ constructing a canal from the waters of the Delaware to those of the Raritan, and of improving the navigation of said rivers.” They admit the construction of the canal, and the diversion of .the waters of the river for that purpose, but demur to the declaration, and set forth as causes of demurrer —

“ That-the act. of the legislature of the then Province of Penn[89]*89sylvania, passed March ninth, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred' and seventy-one, and the act of the then Province.of New Jersey, passed December twenty-first, in the year of our Lord'one thousand seven hundred and seventy-one, as set forth in said amended fifth count, do not vest in the said Adam Hoops, or in his heirs or assigns, the right and privilege, to the use of the water of the River Delaware without diminution or alteration, by or from the act of the then Province, now State, of Pennsylvania, or of the then Province, now State, of New Jersey, or of any person or persons claiming under 'either of them, or of any person or persons whomsoever, as averred in the said amended fifth count of the said declaration. And also, for that it does not appear, from the said amended fifth count, that the same George Rundle and William Griffiths are entitled to the right and privilege to the use of the water of the River Delaware, in manner and form as they have averred in the said amended fifth count of their declaration.

“ And also that, as it appears from the said amended fifth count, that the said River Delaware is a common highway and public navigable river, over which the States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey have concurrent jurisdiction, and. a boundary of said States, these defendants insist that the legislative' acts of the then Province of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, passed in the' year of our Lord seventeen hundred and seventy-one, as set forth in the said amended fifth count, were intended to. declare the said River Delaware a common highway, and for improving the navigation thereof, and that the provision therein contained, as to the mill-dam erected by Adam Hoops, in the said River Delaware, did not .and does not amount to a grant or conveyance of water power to the said Adam Hoops, his heirs or assigns, or to a surrender of the public right in the waters of .the said river, but to a permission only to obstruct the ■ waters of the said river by the said dam, without being subjected to the penalties of nuisance; that the right of the said Adam Hoops was, and that of his assigns is, subordinate to the public right at the pleasure of the legislature of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, or either of them.”

On this demurrer the court below gave judgment for tL*? defendants, which is now alleged as error.

It is evident, that the extent of the plaintiffs rights as a riparian owner, and the question whether this proviso operates as the grant of a usufruct of the waters of the river, or only as a licénse or toleration of a nuisance, liable to revocation or subordinate to the paramount public right, must depend on the laws and-customs of Pennsylvania, as expounded by her own courts. It will be proper, therefore, to give a brief sketch of [90]*90the public history of the river and the legislative action connected with it, as also of the principles of law affecting aquatic rights, as developed and established by the courts of that State.

The River Delaware is the well known boundary between the States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Below tide water, the river, its soil and islands, formerly belonged to the crown; above tide water, it was vested in the proprietaries of the coterminous provinces — each holding ad medium filum aqua. Since • the Revolution, the States have succeeded to the public fights both of the crown and the proprietaries. Immediately after the Revolution, these St . entered into the compact of 1783, declaring the Delaware a common highway for the use of both, and ascertaining their respective jurisdiction over the same. For thirty years after this compact, they appear to have enjoyed their common property without dispute or collision. When the legislature of either State passed an act affecting it, they requested and obtained the concurrence and consent of the o her. Their first dispute was caused by an act of New Jersey, passed February 4, 1815, authorizing Coxe and others to erect a wing dam, and divert the water for the purpose of mills and other machinery. The consent of the State of Pennsylvania was not requested; it therefore called forth a protest from the legislature of that State. This was followed by further remonstrance in the following year. A proposition was made to submit the question of their respective rights to the Supreme Court of the United States, which was rejected by New Jersey. After numerous messages’and remonstrances between the governors and legislatures, commissioners were mutually appointed to compromise the disputes. But they failed to bring the matter to an .amicable conclusion. The dispute was never settled, and the wing dam remained in the river.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 U.S. 80, 14 L. Ed. 335, 14 How. 80, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rundle-v-delaware-and-raritan-canal-company-scotus-1853.