Stone v. . State

33 N.E. 733, 138 N.Y. 124, 51 N.Y. St. Rep. 718, 93 Sickels 124, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 820
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 733 (Stone v. . State) 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
Stone v. . State, 33 N.E. 733, 138 N.Y. 124, 51 N.Y. St. Rep. 718, 93 Sickels 124, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 820 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Andrews, Ch. J.

This is an appeal from an award of the Board of Claims, made June 24, 1891, for the sum of $530, in favor of the claimants for damages caused by the overflow of the waters of Genesee river upon and over the farm of the claimants, in the town of Hume, Allegany county, on or about the 6th day of June, 1889. '

The general facts found by the board and upon which the award is based, are stated in the award. It was found that the state in the years 1839 and 1840, while engaged in the construction of the Genesee Valley canal, caused the channel of the Genesee river in the towns of Hume and Caneadea, near the lands in question, to be changed, to avoid the winding course of the river, which ran a circuitous course of over two miles at this point, with a sluggish current. The new channel cut by the state was from 80 to 100 rods in length, and turned the flow of the water, which formerly ran a distance of two miles or over, in the old channel at this point, within the new channel so constituted. The change in the channel resulted in the water of the river flowing upon and washing away the adjoining land. The farm of the claimants, however, was not affected by the erosion, as it did not adjoin the new channel. It was also found that in order. to protect the adjoining lands from damage, which it was foreseen would result from the change in the channel, the state constructed a guard bank parallel with the new channel, on the *127 north side thereof; that this bank was gradually undermined by the current running in the new channel during a period of more than thirty years ; that the state negligently omitted to maintain it and keep it in repair, or to provide other protection against the overflow or washing away of the bank; that in June, 1889, the water in the new channel overflowed and ran over the land adjoining, and from thence on to the premises of the claimants, causing the damage specified; that at the time of the overflow complained of, there was a freshet greater than had occurred in that locality in many years, but that the water did not rise to within about four feet of the top of a portion of the guard bank then standing as originally constructed, and that the damages sustained by the claimants were not caused by the freshet, but were occasioned by the change in the channel and the negligence of the state in not maintaining and keeping in repair the guard bank, or providing other suitable protection against the overflow of the water.

The state has appealed from the award, and by the notice of appeal, the validity of the award is challenged as against law and evidence, and on the point of jurisdiction and for elrors in the admission of evidence.

It is claimed on behalf of the state that the evidence conclusively establishes- that the overflow of the river at the time in question was attributable to a. freshet of unprecedented character operating over a wide territory, and that the presence of a guard bank at the point in question would not have prevented the overflow. It was the same freshet which caused the Johnstown disaster' in Pennsylvania, and it was admitted by the claimants, on the hearing of the claim, that' such a freshet had not occurred in the locality in question for twenty-five years, and it was conceded (upon offer of proof being made) that the Genesee on that occasion overflowed the country at a great number of places, and that the water in the Chemung at Elmira rose from twenty to twenty-eight feet above its ordinary stage, causing serious damage. Indeed, the violence of the floods "caused by the June freshet of 1889 is matter of common history. But in view of the rule which *128 is made part of the statute regulating appeals from the Board of Claims, that only questions of law arising on the hearing of the claim are cognizable by this court upon an appeal from an award, with the single exception of the quamt/um of damages (Chap. 205, Laws of 1883, § 17), we cannot reverse the award upon the ground that there was no evidence that the guard bank, if it had been maintained as originally constructed, would not have prevented the overflow on the premises of the claimants.

But we are of opinion that there are several errors of law which require a reversal of the award.

The claimants at the hearing presented a record of an award made by the Board of Claims, March 9, 1887, upon a claim filed by one Thomas B. Leet against the state, to show the liability of the state.” The counsel for the state objected to the competency of the record as evidence in the case, stating the grounds in detail. The objection was overruled and an exception was taken, and the record was then read in evidence. The record showed that on March 9,1887, the Board of Claims awarded to Thomas B. Leet the sum of $320 upon a claim originally filed by him June 29, 1870, before the Board of Canal Appraisers, and afterwards transferred to the Board of Claims, for damages sustained by him prior to that date, from the washing away of his land adjoining the channel of Genesee river in the towns of Hume and Caneadea in the county of Allegany, caused by the new direction and force of the current of the river, and the failure of the state to maintain proper and sufficient guard banks. This record was improperly admitted. The claimants in this case were not parties to that proceeding. They were neither privies in law or estate with Thomas B. Leet. The present claimants acquired their title to a part of the lands owned by them, in 1872, and to all prior to the award made in the former proceeding. So far as appears Thomas B. Leet never had title to the lands owned by the present claimants.

The doctrine is elementary that a judgment binds only parties or privies. A fact established and adjudged against *129 one party in an action by another party, is never evidence hi favor of a different party in another litigation, although the the party against whom the fact was established in the prior action, is the same party against whom it is sought to be used in the subsequent action, unless, as has been said, there is privity between the two litigants in respect to the subject in controversy. (Moore v. Albany, 98 N. Y. 396, and cases cited.) The admission of this record is now sought to be justified on the ground that it was competent evidence of notice to the state of the defective condition of the guard bank. It was offered “ to show the liability of the state,” and the Board of Claims adopted several findings of fact material in this case, from the findings in that record which are supported by no proof independently of that record. Its admission was a material error.

Another error in the award arises out of the assumption that the damages sustained by the claimants resulted, as a legal conclusion, from the fact of the overflow and the omission of the state to maintain the guard bank in repair. Assuming for the present that a duty rested upon the state to maintain the guard bank, and that as originally constructed it would have retained the water within the new channel, the omission of this duty created a claim only in favor of such owners of lands' overflowed, who were injured in consequence of the action of the state in changing the channel, and who except for this act would not have sustained a similar injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 733, 138 N.Y. 124, 51 N.Y. St. Rep. 718, 93 Sickels 124, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-state-ny-1893.