Skipwith v. Young

5 Munf. 276, 5 Va. 276, 1816 Va. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 2, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 Munf. 276 (Skipwith v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skipwith v. Young, 5 Munf. 276, 5 Va. 276, 1816 Va. LEXIS 46 (Va. 1816).

Opinion

December 2d, ISIli, the Judges .d(>lmjHB.heir opinions, seriatim.

Judge Coaeteb I'.- fovií qm s:iiií!*HÍ¡! .vises, and which alone has ,, ji< ib!- die, is whether the Court has ‘jurisdict &

It is an action on ease,, broi f.lii t.yjKie A ;>p--Il<-e against the Appellant, for n. nob.o,-m i>, iwetm# r- W-i* ÍX on her own land, whereby .s he tlle^e .. <h-' .• si ¡«>«n back

and overflows a p;;i of hi? ?,nP .-.Cjiii-ib.v;.. ijisu health of Ms family is injured.

There is a great vti-N-i of pleas, soiling on liu- right of the Appellant, by con- nr of lite Appt-lh e ami otherwise. to erect the Dam; to all of which .except two. liieu; arc Demurrers, and judgments thereon for the Appelk i ; one o'-’ mere of which, thus demurred to, -!vep >i¡;¡i Cm Pusim Skip toil be‘.bo Testator of the Appellant, ami under whom she- cuinis, was seized and possessed of the said Hill in ice, and also ,-f ifie ¡and staled to tie overflowed, and died ?.»smiaed. Tfcr, pleas- on which issues were taken were the- foot, which is the plea of not guilty, and the sixth, which all-: ;hyi m>; 1 mis Dabney in 1-748 was

seized of the land. u: the Jli’i And Bam era built, and the land alleged to be overflowed, ano had then n Mill and Dam there erected, ázc. and that ffcc ¡sausi* has ever rinaCbeen kept ip, and rebuilt, ázc.. c.u-'S that the Appellant (/ioinw’under said [277]*277Dabney, &c. There was at first a Demurrer to this plea also; but that was afterwards withdrawn by consent, and issue taken thereon : after this, by consent, this plea is withdrawn, and not guilty pleaded, with leave on both sides to give in evidence the special mutter in support or avoidance of the matter contaiued in said plea. On this there was a verdict for the plaintiff, and one penny damages, subject to the opinion of the Court on a point reserved; to wit, whether, after the Act of 1748, any person could lawfully build a Mill, although he might be owner of the land on both sides of the stream, and also of the land overflowed, without permission first obtained from tile county Court; and whether, if such Mill was built before 1748, and was by accident destroyed, &e. and not rebuilt within three years, the party could rebuild without such leave, he not being within any of the disabilities stated in the statute during such three years, although he should be owner of the kind as aforesaid. This question was adjourned by the Judge, who tried the cause to the General Court for novelty and difficulty ; which Court directed it to be certified, that Judgment ought to be given for the Appellee. From all this it aeems that the great question between the parties was the right and title to tiie land, alleged to be overflowed, and the right of the Appellant to continue the Mill and Dam.

This right, as it regards the Mill, it is contended is ueither a Freehold nor a Franchise; and if it is either, yet it was not the matter in controversy, within the meaning of ihe second section of the Act constituting the Court of Appeals, although that right may be decided on in a manner, which, either by way of bar or estoppel, is finally conclusive between the parties : and it is farther contended that there are no points of difference between this and the cases of Hutchinson v. Kellam and Lymbrick v. Seldon, 3 Munf. 202, of sufficient consequence to take this case out of the influence of those.

The right to a Mill, as sueh, and to take toll thereat, which is descendible, and of which a widow may be endowed, is a Franchise, ora right of Toll, I apprehend, of which an Assize will lie de. Libero tenemento, according to Jehu Webb's case, 8 Co. 45-6; and if the party has a right to an abutment against, or to overflow the lands of another, it may be considered a Franchise, I presume, even within the definition thereof given [278]*278by tlie Bar. A Mill permitted to be built on these terms, is no restraint on the right of a man to use his own land as he pleases, provided he does no injury to his neighbour; on the contrary, the property of another is, as it ,were, seized on, or subjected to injury, to a certain extent, it being considered in fact for the public use, (for which alone it can be taken without his consent,) such machines being considered useful and necessary to the public: this conversion of property to the public use, and of which the individual gets the benefit, is compensated for to the public by the erection of some useful machine, as a Mill, to which Toll is incident, or some other useful machine to which Toll is not incident.

The Appellant therefore claims, in this case, either a freehold right of Toll, or what may perhaps more properly be called a franchise, which, in an Assize or other real action to re" cover the same, would have been sufficient to give this Court jurisdiction. But if I am wrong here, the Appellee sets out a case of nuisance to his Land, for which an Assize, or quod permittat prosternere, which is called the Writ of Right in that case, would lie ; and if such form of action had been resorted to, there is no question, 1 believe, but an appeal on either side would have been proper. The action on the case, though, has superseded these real actions; and it then becomes a matter of consideration, whether, if the Appellee, who was the plaintiff in this case, had laid his damages at less than $100, and there had been a verdict against him, which on this declaration I apprehend would finally have concluded his> rights as to the nuisance, he could have appealed to this Court; in other words, whether the damages, which may only have been for a few days continuance of the nuisance, or the enjoyment of the real estate clear of this incumbrance was the real and main matter in controversy ? the thing’ really claimed and sought to be recovered? And whether the plea, which put in issue, the right to the land, alleged to be overflowed^ had that also been decided against him, should finally conclude him on that point without appeal ? If the plaintiff, notwithstanding his claim to damages, was less than $100, could appeal in such a case, so I apprehend might the defendant, although less damages were found against him.

[279]*279But it is said, the cases of Hutchinson v. Kellam, and Lymbrick v. Seldon, if adhered to, must govern this case, there being no substantial difference. Those cases I understand were mere possessory cases in trespass quare clausum fregit, in which, from the pleadings, the Verdict and Judgment would not have concluded the party, either by way of bar or estoppel, in a Writ of Right, or any other superior action, but, at most, would have been evidence in such future action.

But if, in an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, the defendant should justify on the ground that the right to the free, hold and inheritance was in him, and issue should be joined thereon, in which case the Verdict and Judgment would final" ly conclude and estop the parties as to the mere right, the question is, whether this would not differ so materially from the above cases, as to shew that the matter in controversy was the freehold, within a reasonable interpretation of the words of the Statute ? In the case of Outram v. Morewood, 3 East, 346, the question was, whether the Verdict and Judgment, in an action of Trespass quare clausum fregit,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Clark v. Dower
68 S.E. 369 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
Miller v. Navigation Co.
9 S.E. 57 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1889)
Greathouse v. Sapp
26 W. Va. 87 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1885)
Rymer v. Hawkins
18 W. Va. 309 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1881)
Umbarger v. Watts
25 Va. 167 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1874)
Clark v. Brown
8 Va. 549 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1852)
Calhoun v. Palmer
8 Va. 88 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1851)
Ayres v. Lewellin
3 Va. 609 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1832)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Munf. 276, 5 Va. 276, 1816 Va. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skipwith-v-young-va-1816.