Woodstock Hardwood & Spool Mfg. Co. v. Charleston Light & Water Co.

66 S.E. 194, 84 S.C. 306, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 29, 1909
Docket7392
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 194 (Woodstock Hardwood & Spool Mfg. Co. v. Charleston Light & Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodstock Hardwood & Spool Mfg. Co. v. Charleston Light & Water Co., 66 S.E. 194, 84 S.C. 306, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 259 (S.C. 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

This is an appeal from a judgment of $25,000 recovered by the plaintiff against the defendant for damages alleged to have been inflicted on the plaintiff by the erection of a dam on Goose Creek, which flooded the lands leased to the plaintiff, injured its timber and destroyed its business. This appeal is the culmination of a litigation which has taken such varying forms that in order to present the real issues an extended statement of facts is necessary, and logical sequence in making the statement requires repetition in condensed form of the statement already set out in the former appeal, 76 S. C-> 95. The bearing of the facts will be better understood by having in mind that one of the main issues in the appeal depends on the construction to be placed on certain stipulations of counsel, which will be hereafter set forth.

The defendant, Charleston Light & Water Company, was chartered by an act approved 19th February, 1898, 22 Stat., 934, for the purpose as expressed in the act, “of introducing a water and light supply in the city of Charleston for its public.purposes.” The special rights deemed essential to the general purposes of incorporation are conferred with *309 some particularity, and among those enumerated are the rights to build dams and to condemn property. Afterwards by an act passed in 1905, special authority to construct a dam across Goose Creek was conferred with a proviso that the company should “be liable for all such dámages as may be established in any court of competent jurisdiction by any landowner claiming that his land has been damaged by reason of the erection of the said dam.”

On or about the 7th of February, 1906, the Ingleside Mining and Manufacturing Company, as the owner of a large tract of land, brought an action for damages against the Charleston Light & Water Company for flooding its lands. At the same time, the Woodstock Hardwood & Spool Manufacturing Company brought its action against the Charleston Light & Water Company for flooding some of the same lands which it had leased from the Ingleside Mining & Manufacturing Company. In both these actions, the claim for damages was limited to the year 1905, and in both of them the plaintiffs asked for the relief of injunction, as well as damages. The Charleston Light & Water Company in its answers set up its statutory rights and franchises, but admitted flooding a small portion of the land.

While these actions were pending, the Charleston Light & Water Company instituted proceedings under the statute against both the Ingleside Company and the Woodstock Company to condemn the property required for its purposes, as set out in its charter. .To the notice of intention to condemn, the Ingleside Company and the Woodstock Company both responded, denying the right of condemnation; and thereafter in April, 1906, united in an action against the Charleston Light & Water Company to enjoin the proceedings, alleging as grounds for relief sought: (1) that the purpose of the proceedings was to take away from them “their rights of action for damages already occasioned and still being occasioned by the trespass aforesaid,” and (£) that the defendant had lost its right to institute condemna *310 tion proceedings by entering upon and taking possession of the land as a trespasser without first taking steps to condemn in the manner authorized by law. The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that it failed to' state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that “the alleged trespass by the defendant upon the lands of the plaintiffs anterior to the proceedings to condemn, the institution of actions at law by the plaintiffs, and the other alleged facts set forth in the complaint, do not prevent the institution of proceedings to condemn by the defendant, nor entitle the plaintiffs to the relief prayed for.”

The Circuit Judge overruled the demurrer and enjoined the condemnation proceedings until the determination of the plaintiffs’ actions for damages. From this order of injunction there was an appeal, which resulted in a judgment of this Court; “that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the injunction dissolved without prejudice to the plaintiffs to recover in their actions in the. Court of Common Pleas, such damages for any trespass on their property and consequent injury to them up to the time the condemnation proceedings were instituted, as are within the purview of the complaint, and not recoverable under the condemnation proceedings; and without prejudice to any right the plaintiffs may have to apply for injunctions against the defendant in aid of the collection of any judgments they may recover in such actions.”

While the appeal just recited was pending the Ingleside Company brought its action against the Charleston Light & Water Company for the entire damage done to its property by the maintenance of the dam. At the same time, the Woodstock Company brought its- separate action for the entire damage to its property, alleging the effect of the obstruction of the water to-be: “that this plaintiff has been compelled to abandon its business at Woodstock aforesaid, and abandon and give up its buildings and timber and remove all its- machinery and business, to its damage forty *311 thousand dollars.” No injunction was sought in either of these actions, and it is clear from this fact, and from the' language of the complaint just quoted, that the plaintiffs meant to express their election to seek judgment for damages and abandon any demand for injunction.

1 The two actions of the Woodstock Company for damages were first tried together under the written stipulations of counsel, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $25,000. The appeal is frdm this judgment, and the first point made, is that the Circuit Judge erred in charging the jury that they had nothing to do with the condemnation proceedings, and that their verdict should embrace all damages inflicted by defendant on the plaintiff, including that which might be due to the plaintiff being permanently deprived of its property. This instruction was clearly contrary to the opinion rendered by this Court in the former appeal in the litigation between the same parties which involved the identical question; for it was adjudged in the former appeal that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover in their actions such damages for trespass on their property and consequent injury to them, as accrued up to the time condemnation proceedings were instituted by the defendant, and as were within the purview of the complaint, and not recoverable under condemnation proceedings; that the damages accruing after the condemnation proceedings were instituted were to be assessed under such condemnation proceedings and were not recoverable in the actions' for damages. The position contended for, that this could apply only to the Ingleside Company because that company was the sole owner of the land, is not tenable. The word “owner,” as used in the statute, embraces not only the owner of the fee, but a tenant for life and a lessee for years and any other person who has an interest in the property, which will be affected by the condemnation. Ross v. R. R., 33 S. C., 477, 12 S. E., 101; Charleston & W. C. Ry.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 194, 84 S.C. 306, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodstock-hardwood-spool-mfg-co-v-charleston-light-water-co-sc-1909.