Thе plaintiffs, who are riparian owners along the Mianus River in Greenwich, instituted this action to enjoin the defendant from diverting, and from attempting to take by condemnation, any of the waters of that stream. The defendant filed a cross complaint claiming a declaratory judgment determining whether it has the right to condemn the water rights although part of the benefits may accrue to inhabitants of Port Chester, New York.
The finding, with minor аdditions which must be made, establishes the following facts: The properties of the plaintiffs are estates with elaborate private residences, representing an investment of many thousands of dollars. Some of the owners have created artificial ponds and islands in the Mianus River. They all use the river for swimming, fishing and skating and draw water from it for their lawns, gardens and livestock and, on occasion, for fire protectiоn. There is no public water supply system serving the neighborhood. In many instances the owners purchased and improved their properties because of the river frontage thereof, and, to some extent, the river enhances the value of the real estate. The river originates in New York state and about 50 per cent of its watershed is in that state. It crosses the Connecticut line in Stamford, then flows south and east through Stamford and Greenwich and empties into Long Island Sound at Cos Cob. It is a flash stream, and at and below the point of the proposed
The defendant is a corporation specially chartered by the Connecticut General Assembly in 1880. 8 Spec. Laws 406. By virtue of its charter and amendments thereof, it has the franchise to furnish water fоr public and domestic use in the town of Greenwich, in a small portion of the town of Stamford adjacent to the Mianus River, in the town of Rye, New York, including Port Chester, and in Westchester County, New York, whenever that use in Westchester County will not curtail the supply adequate for the inhabitants of Connecticut. In the summer of 1929 the defendant, in order to supplement its water supply, started to pump water from the Mianus River at Farms Road, which is upstream from the plaintiffs’ properties. The riparian owners instituted suits, and as a result of their action the defendant entered into a contract in 1933 with the Stamford Water Company for a supplemental supply of water and ceased the taking of water from the Mianus.
A period of extreme drought occurred in the summer of 1949. The defendant’s water supply diminished rapidly. By August 1 its reservoirs were only about 60 per сent full. Notice was received that the Stamford Water Company would have to reduce the amount of water to be furnished by it below the four million gallons daily called for by the contract. Thereupon, on August 9, 1949, the defendant began pumping water, at the rate of about a million gallons daily, from the Mi-anus River at Farms Road into a pipe line which led into one of its reservoirs. When this came to the attention of the plaintiff Altschul, inquiries were made of the defendant on her behalf and a series of conferences and letters between the parties ensued. The defendant acknowledged that it had no legal right to divert the water as it was doing without purchasing or condemning the
The original charter of the defendant granted it the right to take by eminent domain any land or water in the town of Greenwich for its corporate purpose. 8 Spec. Laws 406. In 1927, after its franchise had been extended in 1925 to include the furnishing of water to Rye (19 Spec. Laws 848), the General Assembly granted it authority, for tire purpose of supplying water
At the present time the defendant has as reservoirs Rockwood Lake, Putnam Lake and Brush Dam, with a total maximum storage capacity of 1,086 million gallons. As an additional source of supply, the defendant has thе contract, referred to above, with the Stamford Water Company, whereby the latter is obligated, subject to acts of God, to furnish the defendant six million gallons daily for the first six months of each year and four million gallons daily for the balance of the year. This contract expires in 1953. For various reasons this contract can no longer be counted upon to provide a reliable source of supply. The wаter coming from the Stamford Water Company is pumped through a twenty-inch pipe line into Rockwood Lake. Rockwood Lake and Converse Lake empty into Putnam Lake. At the lower end of Putnam Lake is a filter system through which the water passes into one main which leads to Greenwich and another which leads to Rye. All of the water supplied to Rye is sold and delivered at the state line to the Port Chester Wаter Works, Inc., an affiliated company. The defendant does not now serve, or plan to serve in the future, any of Westchester County outside of Rye.
On the foregoing facts the trial court concluded that, because the damage suffered by the plaintiffs from the diversion of the water of the river was far outweighed by the utility of the defendant’s conduct and the interests of the public therein, no injunction should issue against future diversion. It also decided, with reference to the prayer for a declaratory judgment, that the defendant may exercise its right of eminent domain in respect to lands and water rights on the Mianus River, “including those of the plaintiffs,” in order to increase its water supply stоrage, although a portion of such additional supply may be delivered to and used by those inhabitants of the state of New York to whom the defendant may supply water under existing legislative grants. It followed from this that the prayer for an injunction against such condemnation was denied.
We will first consider the question whether the defendant has the power to condemn the water rights of the plaintiffs for the purpose of сonstructing its proposed reservoir. Clearly, the General Assembly, by the amendment of the defendant’s charter in 1927, purported to grant it that right. The taking of water by a water company chartered to supply water to the public is a taking for a public use.
Water Commissioners
v. Manchester,
The position taken by the plaintiffs, however, is that the proposed taking will benefit residents of New York and that, therefore, the 1927 amendment of the defendant's charter either should be so construed as to limit the taking of water rights to such taking as will be necessary to furnish an adequate supply of water to Connecticut residents or should be held unconstitutional. They say that, in so far as the defendant proposes to construct a reservoir greater in capacity than is necessary to supply its customers in Connecticut, such a reservoir is for the exclusive benefit of nonresidents. It is true that no state is permitted to exercise or authorize the exercise of the power of eminent domain except for a public use within its own borders.
Trombley
v.
Humphrey,
The Genеral Assembly granted the defendant the franchise to sell water for use not only in the state of Connecticut but also in the state of New York. The motives which induced this action did not appear, but
There is no finding of what the safe daily yield of the proposed reservoir will be. The plaintiffs have failed to prove that that safe daily yield will be in excess of what will, in the reasonably near future, be needed for the adequate protection of the company’s customers in Connecticut. It may well be that a reservoir with the storage capacity planned will, together with the defendant’s other reservoirs, yield no more in extremely dry weather than will be consumed in Connecticut. If that were the case, the furnishing of water to Rye and Port Chester when there was a surplus would detract nothing from the use of the reservoir by Connecticut residents. And, even though that were not the case, it is clear that the reservoir is or soon will be needed to provide an adequate^ supply for Greenwich and a portion of Stamford. It will be a substantial benefit to the citizens of this state. Under the law, therefore, there is justification for the exercise of the power of eminent domain even though it may also benefit nonresidents. The trial court was correct in refusing to enjoin the defendant from condemning the water rights of the plaintiffs in order to permit the construction of the proposed reservoir.
We turn now to a consideration of the plaintiffs’ prayer for an injunction restraining the defendant from further diverting the water of the Mianus by pumping. It is well established thаt a riparian owner is entitled to have the water of the stream upon which he borders continue to flow in its wonted manner.
Farrington
v.
Klauber,
The trial court denied the injunction in this case because it concluded that to grant it would result in damage to the defendant disproportionate in amount to the damage refusal of the injunction would cause the plaintiffs and would be detrimental to the public interest. In an action involving riparian rights, a mandatory injunction should ordinarily be refused on the theory of comparative damage between the parties only when the infringement оf the plaintiff’s rights was under an innocent mistake or a bona fide claim of right on the part of the defendant, or where his conduct was not wilful and inexcusable, or where the plaintiff has been guilty of laches.
Sisters of St. Joseph Corporation
v.
Atlas Sand, Gravel & Stone Co.,
supra, 175;
Bauby
v.
Krasow,
The limitations on the propriety of the denial of an injunction on the theory of comparative damage between the parties do not apply to the refusal of an injunction which, if issued, would seriously affect public interest. It is well within a court’s discretion
That consideration is this: The plaintiffs do have property rights to the accustomed flow of the Mianus River. In the emergency of a drought the public interest may require the court to refuse to protect those rights by way of injunction. However, the riparian owners ought not to be deprived permanently of those rights without compensation. If the judgment of the trial court stands in its present form, there is nothing to prevent the defendant from continuing indefinitely to pump water from the river as the most economical way of getting its required supply. By doing this it might well be able to avoid the building of its proposed reservoir. The result would be that the plaintiffs would for many years cоntinue to be deprived of their rights without any compensation except that which they might recover by a multiplicity of actions. It is obviously not doing equity to leave them in such a position. Under the circumstances of this case, equity demanded that the defendant be allowed a reasonable time within which to make adequate compensation to the plaintiffs for the permanent taking of their water rights if it intends to аcquire them, and, if that compen
There is error in part, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to hear the parties and determine what will be a reasonable time to be allowed to the defendant to acquire the water rights of the plaintiffs by condemnation or otherwise — that to be the sole issue of fact to be tried — аnd then to enter a judgment which shall (1) direct that unless compensation is made within that reasonable time the defendant shall be enjoined from further diversion of the waters of the stream as prayed, (2) deny the prayer for an injunction against condemning such water rights of the plaintiffs as will be taken for the construction of the proposed reservoir, and (3) deny the prayer of the cross complaint for a declaratory judgment.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
