Walton v. . Mills

86 N.C. 280
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 86 N.C. 280 (Walton v. . Mills) 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
Walton v. . Mills, 86 N.C. 280 (N.C. 1882).

Opinion

*281 Smith, C. J.

The object of this action, brought by several proprietors of land on an unnavigable stream which proceeds from an upper tract belonging to the defendant, is to restrain him from a contemplated diversion of its waters from their proper channel by means of canals and conduits in process of construction, and which the defendant intends to use in gold washing operations, to the injury of the gold mines and mills on the plaintiffs’ lands which require the uninterrupted flow of the water. Upon an ex parte application of the plaintiffs the judge appointed a day for the hearing, and meanwhile issued an order requiring the defendant to desist “from diverting or changing from their natural course, the waters of Hall’s Creek and its upper tributaries, or otherwise obstructing or interfering with the natural and regular flow thereof.” At the hearing upon the complaint, answer and accompanying affidavits offered as evidence, His Honor “adjudged that the restraining order be continued and the defendant enjoined as directed in the restraining order from doing the acts therein forbidden, until the hearing of the cause.” From this judgment the defendant appeals.

It does not appear that any dámage to the property of the plaintiffs has yet accrued from any act of the defendant whose canals and conduits have not tapped the creek to drain its waters, and it is from the apprehended consequences and injury to follow when this is done, that the coercive power of the court is sought in advance.

The relative rights of lower and upper proprietors of land over which a natural water-course flows, to the running water, are well settled, and have been so considered ever since the elaborate judgment rendered in Mason v. Howard, 5 B. and A. 1, and the true principle, “most perspicuously stated ” as observed by Baron Parice in Embrey v. Owen, 6 Exc., 369.

“ Every proprietor of land on the bank of a river has nat *282 urally an equal right to the use of the water which flows in the stream, adjacent to bis lands, as it was wont to run (currere solebat) without diminution or alteration.. No proprietor has the right to use the water, to the prejudice of the proprietors above or below him, unless he has a prior right to divert it, or a title to some exclusive enjoyment. He has no property in the water itself, but a simple usufruct while it passes along. Aqua currii et debet currere is the language of the law. Though he may use the water while-it runs on his land, he cannot unreasonably detain it, or give it another direction, and he must return it to its ordinary channel, when it leaves his estate. * * * Streams of water are intended for the use and comfort of man, and it would be unreasonable, and contrary to the universal sense of mankind, to debar any riparian proprietor from the application of the water to domestic, agricultural and manufacturing purposes, provided the use of it be made under the limitations which have been mentioned.” 3 Kent. Com., 439, 440.

The reasonable use of the water as it passes in its onward course so that no damage is done by withholding it, is the rule by which the rights of riparian owners are regulated. Ph. Rights of Water, 26, 27: and this is recognized in Pugh v. Wheeler, 2 Dev. & Bat, 50; State v. Glen, 7 Jones, 321. Conceding the general principle, it does not follow that, when the injury from the excessive appropriation of the water by an upper proprietor to the land of a lower proprietor is inconsiderable, and may be compensated in damages,. while the stoppage of the works of the other will entail on him large and irreparable loss, the restraining power will be exercised ; and still less when the injury to the complaining party is uncertain in fact and degree, and mainly conjectural and apprehended. It is not every casein which an action will lie that a court of equity will interpose.

“ There must be such an injury as from its nature is not susceptible of being adequately compensated by damages *283 at law, or such as, from its continuance or permaneht mischief, must occasion a constantly recurring grievance which cannot be otherwise prevented but by an injunction.” 2 Story Eq. Jur., § 925. And usually the right should be established by the finding of the jury. High on Inj., § 517. “ It is not every slight or doubtful injury,” remarks Nash, C. J., in Wilder v. Strickland, 2 Jones Eq., 386, “that will justify the courts in exerting their extraordinary power of injunction in restraining a man from using his property as his interest may demand, when the benefit is mutual to the public and the owner.”

The present interlocutory order of restraint suspends the operations of the defendant, looking to the successful working and development of a new and valuable industry, with the possible loss of a large expenditure towards that object when no damage has yet been received, and if it should come, may prove less than the defendant’s apprehensions may have estimated, and measurable in a money remuneration. We have so recently had occasion to consider this aspect of the case and the practice appropriate thereto, that we simply refer to Dorsey v. Allen, 85 N. C., 358, and avoid needless repetition.

Looking into the evidence which we find much difficulty in understanding from the want of a map to show the locality of the different objects to which it refers, it seems that the defendant proposes to conduct the waters of Hall’s creek and some of its tributaries by means of canals to his gold mine and'there to use and waste it in washing the auriferous earth, and separating from it the gold which it contains, by a process suitable to that end. The plaintiffs allege that this withdrawal of the water will seriously injure their similar gold operations and interfere with the working of their mills, for which the water supply will be wholly insufficient. The defendant on the contrary avows that he owns over two thousand acres of land valueless except as a *284 gold retine, for which the water is an indispensable necessity; that he has made large expenditures in preparation for his work; that the intended diversion of part of the waters will still leave a sufficient supply for all the plaintiffs’ purposes, milling, mining or agricultural, for which their lands have hitherto been, or are now, or intended to be used, and they would still have double the quantity abstracted by the canals of the defendant, and he attempts to explain the sources from which this supply will be derived. The plaintiffs assert their property also to be valuable, if the waters of the creek and its branches are permitted to flow on free from obstruction or drainage, and the serious detriment it will sustain if the defendant is allowed to carry out his designs.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.C. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walton-v-mills-nc-1882.