Watts' Administrators v. Kinney

6 Hill & Den. 82

This text of 6 Hill & Den. 82 (Watts' Administrators v. Kinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watts' Administrators v. Kinney, 6 Hill & Den. 82 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Walworth, Chancellor.

The plaintiffs in error brought an action on the case in the superior court of the city of New-York for an injury to real property, and were nonsuited upon the trial. And two questions are presented for our consideration on this writ of error, viz. 1. Whether such an action can be sustained in the common law courts of this state for an injury to real property in the state of New-Jersey; and 2. Whether the evidence of the plaintiffs upon the trial was sufficient to authorize a recovery for the injury complained of in any court.

The cause of action stated in the declaration is unquestionably local, not only by the provisions of the revised statutes, but also by the settled rule of the common law. The decision in Mostyn v. Fabrigas, (1 Smith’s Lead. Cases, 340,) was in a suit for an injury to the person of the plaintiff in a foreign country, and not for an injury to real estate beyond the jurisdiction of the court. The case was rightly disposed of upon the facts there presented. But Lord Mansfield, in pronouncing his opinion, approved of two nisi prius decisions in which actions were [87]*87sustained in England for injuries to real property in foreign countries. Those decisions, however, were afterwards overruled by the court of Icing’s bench in Doulson v. Matthews, (4 Durn. & East’s Rep. 503.) And one of the ablest judges that has adorned the bench of this or any other country, after a full and elaborate argument of the question before him, has pronounced the decision in Doulson v. Matthews to be in accordance with the settled principles of the common law. In the case of Livingston v. Jefferson, (1 Brockenb. Rep. 203,) which was trespass quare clausum fregit brought against a former president of the United States for removing the plaintiff from the Batture in New-Orleans, the suit was instituted in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Virginia; and the sole question presented for consideration was, whether such an action could be sustained out of the territory where the alleged injury to the real estate was committed. That too was a case much stronger than the present. For it was evident there that if an action could not be sustained in the state of Virginia, where the venerable ex-president resided, the plaintiff was without a remedy for the alleged injury; as it was wholly improbable that the defendant would ever visit Louisiana, and no court of the territory could send its process into the state of Virginia so as to commence an action against him in any court having jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suit. But Chief Justice Marshall decided that the distinction between transitory and local actions, as long before settled by the courts, was, that actions were to be deemed transitory where the transactions upon which they were founded might have taken place any where; but were local where the cause of action was in its nature necessarily local. And that although the distinction was merely technical, where the action was instituted to recover damages from the person who had done the local injury, and not to recover the property which had a fixed locality, the law was too well settled to allow it to be changed by the courts.

Several cases were referred to from the decisions of the court of chancery in this country and in England, by the counsel for the plaintiffs, upon the argument, to show that bills have been [88]*88filed to reach property beyond the jurisdiction of the court, where the person of the defendant was within its jurisdiction. Those cases are founded) however, upon the well established principle that the court of chancery has power to give relief wherever there is a clear case of right for which the common law tribunals cannot give an adequate remedy.- And they afford no grounds for the extensión of the jurisdiction of a common law court to a case which is clearly not within its known and established jurisdiction.

Again, it is urged that the objection to the jurisdiction of the superior court was not made in time; and that the defendant could not avail himself of that objection by a motion for a non-suit, when it appeared at the trial that the real estate alleged to have been injured by the wrongful act of the defendant, was not within the jurisdiction of the court. But the case of Warren v. Webb, (1 Taunt. Rep. 380,) shows that when the place is described under a Videlicet, bringing it within the local jurisdiction, a demurrer is not the proper remedy; and that advantage may be taken of the objection at the trial, when the plaintiff fails to show the locus in quo to be within the cotinty stated in the declaration for the purpose of giving apparent jurisdiction. The defendant was also permitted to avail himself of the objection by motion for a nonsuit in Doulson v. Matthews, before referred to. In the case of Livingston v. Jefferson, the injury Avas alleged to have occurred at the city of New-Orleans, in the district of Orleans, to wit, at Richmond, in the county of Henrico, and district of Virginia. And the question was decided upon á special plea, showing that the Batture, as to which the alleged trespass had been committed, ivas not in the district of Virginia. In the present case, I think the question was properly raised itpon a motion for a nonsuit at the trial j and that the decisiori of the superior court was right) upon the ground that the áction-was local in its nature, and could not be sustained in that Court.

Upon the second question also, I concur in opinion, with thé supreme court, as to the tiÓhstrhctioii of the lease; and think that upon that ground the plaintiffs failed to shorv them[89]*89selves entitled to recover in this action. The proviso appears to have been intended to be co-extensive with the whole grant of water power; and to restrict the use bf the dam to the raising of the water to a particular height. The intention of the parties would probably have been more clearly expressed, if, instead of putting the restriction in the form of a proviso, these words had been used: “ But the water in said dam shall not be raised higher than to flow the water back even with the bottom of the apron of the water-wheel, at the mill next above, as the same now lays,” dec. Upon the construction which has been given to the lease by the supreme court, the defendant’s ditch was rendered necessary by the wrongful act of the adverse party; and if such party wished to use the right of way across the ditch, it was his own business to bridge it properly, and he had no right to call upon the defendant to bridge it for him.

For these reasons, I think the judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed.

Hopkins, Senator.

This was an action on the case brought to recover damages for an injury done to real estate, and by the revised statutes, as well as the common law, it is declared to be local. (2 R. /S'. 409, § 2.) The act establishing the superior court confers upon it the power of trying only such local actions as arise within the city and county of New-York; (3 R. /S'. 261, § 5;) and as the injury complained of here was committed in New-Jersey, that court had no jurisdiction. Whether the supreme court has or has not jurisdiction in cases like the present, it is not now necessary to determine.

I am of opinion that the objection for want of jurisdiction was properly taken at the trial, and that the judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed.

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Related

Cogswell v. Meech
12 Wend. 147 (New York Supreme Court, 1834)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Hill & Den. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-administrators-v-kinney-nycterr-1843.