Wright v. City of Oneonta

165 Misc. 492, 1 N.Y.S.2d 295, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1077
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 165 Misc. 492 (Wright v. City of Oneonta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. City of Oneonta, 165 Misc. 492, 1 N.Y.S.2d 295, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1077 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

McNaught, J.

Oneonta creek, a tributary of the Susquehanna river, passes through the city of Oneonta. The watershed comprises about eight and one-half square miles. The stream is the source of water supply for the city. The Oneonta Water Works Company was organized about the year 1884. It acquired from the riparian owners the right to dam said stream for the purpose of impounding the waters thereof and to stop the natural flow of said stream, a part, the whole, or a portion of the year as the case may be.” The Oneonta Water Works Company, for the purpose of supplying water to the then village of Oneonta, constructed a dam upon said stream about four miles from the present city limits. The waters so impounded overflow into the channel of the stream to a lower or distributing reservoir, and so into filtration plants. The overflow passes over a fifty-foot spillway and down the stream to the Susquehanna river. The distance from the upper reservoir to the junction with the river is five miles. In the year 1908 the village of Oneonta was duly incorporated as a city of the third class by chapter 454 of the Laws of 1908. Various amendatory acts have been passed which have no consequence here. About the year 1923 the defendant city, under the provisions of the will of George I. Wilber, a distinguished citizen of the city, became the owner of the property and franchises of the Oneonta Water Works Company, and has since continued to operate the distribution system, furnishing water to the inhabitants of the city.

The plaintiff’s predecessor in title, on or about July 5, 1933, acquired certain premises located adjacent to Fair street in such city, and a short distance from the Oneonta creek as it flowed to the Susquehanna river. On or about July 8, 1935, the Oneonta creek rose to such a height that it caused flood conditions, and the waters came over and upon the premises of the plaintiffs, carrying away a four-car garage, eroding the lot so as to require a large quantity of filling to raise it to its previous condition, and by action of the flood waters damaged the house upon the premises, causing it to settle, the walls to crack, and various other incidental ¡ damages.

[494]*494The plaintiffs contend that the defendant city, having succeeded to the rights and liabilities of the Oneonta Water Works Company, assumed control of Oneonta creek and was obligated to maintain it within its banks in such a manner as not to injure adjacent property. It is also claimed that the city, through its officials, has altered and changed the channel of the stream, and in so doing has failed to protect the rights and property of lower riparian owners.

It appears from the testimony, and is fairly established, that a portion of the channel of the creek has been dredged; that in 1927 some 1,200 feet was dredged, so that the waters of the creek would run into a swimming pool in Wilber Park (a public playground of the city), and the waters flowing from the pool by a new channel would pass back into the original channel of the creek; that the city in the year 1928, through its board of park commissioners who exercised authority over the change of the waters into the pool, found it necessary to acquire land from an adjacent riparian owner, and by formal resolution determined it was advisable to straighten the creek in Wilber Park, and authorized the payment of $100 to one Oliver for land which would be used in making such improvement. It is not contended that the city authorities have in any manner changed or interfered with the natural course or channel of the stream after leaving the bounds of Wilber Park as it passes through the city to its junction with the river.

The premises of the plaintiffs are situated one and three-quarters miles from the dam at the lower reservoir maintained by the defendant. Six bridges are maintained by the city over the stream as it passes various streets and public highways within the city. Several of the bridges are new, having been constructed or reconstructed within the last few years. The abutments are in the same locations, and are of the same sizes, as they have been since the year 1912.

It appears from the Weather Bureau records that there was a precipitation of rainfall on July 7, 1935, of 1.47 inches; July 8th, 5.24 inches; that during the forty-eight hours July 7th and 8th, the total precipitation recorded was 6.71, while the maximum precipitation shown by the records from 1895 for any forty-eight-hour period was 5.69 inches, and the maximum precipitation for any twenty-four-hour period was 5.09 inches. The records also show that the total precipitation for the month of July, 1935, was 10.61 inches, the maximum in any month since the Weather Bureau records were first kept at Oneonta, commencing January, 1895.

On July 8 and 9, 1935, the Oneonta creek reached a turbulent flood stage. Trees were uprooted and carried downstream together [495]*495with debris of various kinds. Some obstructions were formed at various points, which diverted the current of the stream. The condition thus created caused material damage, and particularly-damaged the plaintiffs.

It was conceded that the conditions creating the nuisance alleged by the plaintiffs had, since the action was brought, been abated by the completion of certain improvements under the governmental agency known as W. P. A., and that plaintiffs made no claim at this time that a nuisance existed which plaintiffs were entitled to have abated.

The questions for determination, therefore, are, first, are the plaintiffs entitled to recover damages against the defendant city; second, if so, the amount of such damages.

It appears that a considerable portion of the watershed has been reforested, which plaintiffs contend had a tendency to augment the flow of water in the stream.

The defendant, a municipal corporation, has no greater right than an individual or than its predecessor in title, Oneonta Water Works Company. It is not entitled to change the channel of the stream in such a manner as to deprive lower riparian owners of the natural flow of the stream as it passes from the property of the city, nor to so increase and augment the flow as to damage lower riparian owners. (Noonan v. City of Albany, 79 N. Y. 470.)

Under the rights acquired from the Oneonta Water Works Company from lower riparian owners upon Oneonta creek, the company was granted the right to dam the stream and erect its reservoirs, and to let the water off at such time or times as the company might wish. Title to the land over which the stream passes was not conveyed. The right that was vested in the water company was to impound, detain and distribute waters, and inferentially, to cause the overflow to continue in the channel and upon the course of Oneonta creek.

The owner of land through which a stream passes has the unquestioned and undoubted right to use it and to divert it upon his lands, provided it is returned to the normal and natural channel as it passes from his lands through the lands of lower riparian owners.

Whatever has been done in reference to the channel of Oneonta creek by the defendant city, has been done upon its own property. There is no evidence which would justify a finding that the course of the stream below the property of the city has been changed, or that any alterations made by the city damaged riparian owners, excepting in changing the course of the stream into a swimming pool in Wilber Park and conducting the overflow back to the original [496]

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Bluebook (online)
165 Misc. 492, 1 N.Y.S.2d 295, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-city-of-oneonta-nysupct-1937.