State v. . Pool

74 N.C. 402
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 74 N.C. 402 (State v. . Pool) 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
State v. . Pool, 74 N.C. 402 (N.C. 1876).

Opinion

ByNüm, J.

The defendant is indicted for constructing * a dam across Swift Creek, in the county of Johnston, whereby the natural flow of the water through the same is retarded and lessened, the said dam and obstruction not being for the purpose of utilizing the water as a motive power;

The jury found the following facts as a special verdict:

1. That the bed of the creek at the point named, and the ■waters of the creek, and the land upon each side of the stream *404 were duly granted by the State in 1749 to one Nathaniel Giles, and that from him the title has regularly descended to the defendant.

2. That the said creek is not navigable, and has never been so declared by the Legislature.

3. That the dam was built ■within two years prior to the finding of the indictment, and that by reason of its construction the natural flow of the water is retarded.

4. That the stream is forty-five feet wide at the point where the dam and trap are erected.

Upon these facts found by the jury, the court below, as a matter of law, declared that the defendant is guilty.

The indictment is founded upon an act incorporated in Battle’s Revisal, chap. 32, section 154, which was enacted in 1872-73, and is as follows: “If any person shall wilfully fell any tree, or wilfully put any obstruction, except for the purpose of utilizing water as a motive power, in any branch, creek or other natural passage for water, whereby the natural flow of water through such passage is lessened or retarded, or w u reby the navigation of such course by any raft or flat may be impeded, delayed or prevented, the person so offending sh ill be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be fined not exceeding fifty dollars, or imprisoned not exceeding-thirty days.”

It will be observed that the indictment charges the offence to be in “ retarding the natural flow of the water through Swift Creek ” by the obstruction of the dam, and therefore no question arises under section 155, which relates to fish dams. The construction of section 154 then will determine the case.

The prosecution insisted that by the use of the disjunctive conjunction, “ or,” in the section just cited, every wilful obstruction of a creek or branch, in any part of the State, which may retard the national flow of the water, is indictable. And so it is, with that construction. But it cannot be supposed *405 that an intelligent Legislature, meant, that every obstruction of a stream, no matter how insignificant, private, or removed from public access or use, shall be indictable and subject the offender to fine and imprisonment. The statute has no degrees, and but the single exception, to-wit: where the water 's utilized as a motive power. So that it is equally a crime to build a dam, to wash the extensive gold deposits and otb r minerals of the State, or to pond water to save ice for domestic or commercial use. A man may not construct a pond for raising fish, but he may, to run an illicit distillery, for that .s utilizing water as a “ motive power.” Many of the streams, in the western part of the State, are hardly accessible to-ma", are remote from habitations, and of such rapid fall, that no obstruction can create a nuisance or affect the public. In that region, dams are often built and the water diverted to dwellings and lots for domestic uses, and sometimes for the irrigation of meadows and gardens. In many portions of the mountain district, large volumes of water are thus conducted from dams, for many miles, in canals and trunks, to the siu-face mines, where the water is used for working away the dirt, preparatory to collecting the gold or other metals.

Certainly the act does not intend to make such obstructions and the like, unlawful, and if it does, the least that can bo said of it, is, that it is of questionable constitutionality, apart from its impolicy. State v. Glenn, 7 Jones 321.

- Whenever an act of the Legislature can be so construed and applied, as to avoid conflict with the constitution, and give it the force of law, such construction will be adopted by the courts. Cooley 185; Newland v. Marsh, 19 Ill. 384. This can be done, in our case, consistently with the rules of construction, by reading the word “ or ” as “ and,” which was most probably intended by the draftsman. The section will then read: “If any person shall wilfully fell any tree, &c., whereby the natural flow of the water, &c., is retarded, and *406 whereby tbe navigation of snob course by any raft or flat, may be impeded,” &e.

Sncb a change of “ or” into “and,” is often resorted to in order to effect the intent of the parties, and prevent the entire avoidance of the instrument. Parker v. Carrow, 64 N. C. Rep., 563, and similar constructions, are allowed and encouraged by our statutes. Bat. Rev., chap. 108. This construction divests the act of all constitutional objections, and it becomes consistent with law, reason and public policy. To the extent that the streams and waters of the State, are used for navigation, or are fairly capable of such use, even for “ rafts and flats,” they fall under the control of the State, so far that the private citizen, though the owner of the land and the bed of the stream, may not exclude the public from their navigation, when the State forbids it. Such only is the declared purpose of section 154; and it remains to be seen whether the special verdict, finds facts which bring the defendant under the penalties of the act. It is found that the bed of the ereek, and the lands upon both sides of it, belong to the defendant, by the grant of the State; and that the creek is not navigable, and has never been so declared by the Legislature. These findings would seem to end the case; for if the creek is not navigable, the alleged obstruction cannot “impede, delay or prevent” the navigation, and so there is no violation of the statute. If the indictment is framed upon the idea that the obstruction is a public, nuisance, no facts are found which constitute it such. It is not found that the public health is affected thereby, or that the lands of others are injured, or that it either occasions, or is calculated to occasion, any public or private inconvenience or deprivation of right. The owner is allowed by the act, to construct a dam of any height, upon the spot where this one is erected, provided he uses the water as a motive power to drive machinery, although he thereby retards the flow of the water, impedes navigation and stops the passage of fish. Such retardation is no public nuisance. *407 How the same act, for a different purpose, though with the samo physical results, can be a nuisance to tho public, is, by no means clear.

By the finding of the jury, the creek at the dam, wasunnavi-gahle for any purpose, and was strictly private property. The only right possessed by others, was to the use of the running water, above and below the lands of the defendant, adpotan-dum. d lava'll dum. The verdict establishes that no such right of others was disturbed.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.C. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pool-nc-1876.