86 N.Y. 140 | NY | 1881
This is not the case of a natural water-course. A natural water-course, is a natural stream, flowing in a defined bed or channel, with banks and sides, having permanent sources of supply. It is not essential to constitute a water-course, that the flow should be uniform or uninterrupted. The other elements existing, a stream does not lose the character of a natural water-course, because in times of drought, the flow may be diminished, or temporarily suspended. It is sufficient if it is usually a stream of running water. (Angell on Water-courses, § 4;Luther v. The Winnisimmet Co., 9 Cush. 171.)
The parties in this case own adjacent lots on a street near a village, but not within the corporate limits. The findings are, that the natural formation of the land was such, that surface water from rains and melting snows, would descend from different directions, and accumulate in the street in from of the plaintiff's lot, in varying quantities according to the nature of the seasons, sometimes extending quite back upon the plaintiff's lot; that in times of unusual amount of rain, or thawing snow, such accumulations, before the grading of the defendant's lot, were accustomed to run off over a natural depression in the surface of the land across the defendant's lot, and thence over the lands of others, to the Neversink river; that when the amount of water was small, it would soak away in the ground; that in 1871, the defendant built a house on his lot, and used the earth excavated in digging the cellar, to improve and better the condition of his lot, by grading and filling up the lot and sidewalk in front of it, about twelve inches, and on a subsequent occasion he filled in several inches more; that in the spring of 1875, there was an unusually large accumulation of water from melting snow and rains in front of, and about the plaintiff's premises, so that the water ran into the cellar of his house, and occasioned serious damage; that the filling in of the defendant's lot, had the effect to increase the accumulation *144 of water on the plaintiff's lot, and contributed to the injury to his property.
There was no natural water-course over the defendant's lot. The surface water, by reason of the natural features of the ground, and the force of gravity, when it accumulated beyond a certainSamount in front of the plaintiff's lot, passed upon, and over the lot of the defendant. The discharge was not constant, or usual, but occasional only. There was no channel or stream, in the usual sense of those terms. In an undulating country, there must always be valleys and depressions, to which water, from rains or snow, will find its way from the hill-sides, and be finally discharged into some natural outlet. But this does not constitute such valleys or depressions, water-courses. Whether, when the premises of adjoining owners are so situated, that surface water falling upon one tenement, naturally descends to and passes over the other, the incidents of a water-course apply to, and govern the rights of the respective parties, so that the owner of the lower tenement may not, even in good faith and for the purpose of improving or building upon his own land, obstruct the flow of such water to the injury of the owner above, is the question to be determined in this case. This question does not seem to have been authoritatively decided in this State. It was referred to by DENIO, Ch. J., in Goodale v. Tuttle (
Upon this state of the authorities, we are at liberty to adopt such rule on the subject, as we may deem most consonant with the demands of justice, having in view on the one hand individual rights, and on the other the interests of society at large. Upon consideration of the question, we are of opinion that the rule stated by DENIO, Ch. J., in Goodale v. Tuttle, is the one best adapted to our condition, and accords with public policy, while at the same time, it does not deprive the owner of the upper tenement, of any legal right of property. The maxim, aquacurrit et debet currere ut currere solebat, expresses the general law, which governs the rights of owners of property on water-courses. The owners of land on a water-course, are not owners of the water which flows in it. But each owner is entitled by virtue of his ownership of the soil, to the reasonable use of the water as it passes his premises, for domestic and other uses, not inconsistent with a like reasonable use of the stream, by owners above and below him. Such use is incident to his right of property in the soil. But he cannot divert, or unreasonably obstruct the passage of the water, to the injury of *147
other proprietors. These familiar principles, are founded upon the most obvious dictates of natural justice, and public policy. The existence of streams is a permanent provision of nature, open to observation, by every purchaser of land through which they pass. The multiplied uses to which in civilized society, the water of rivers and streams is applied, and the wide injury which may result from an unreasonable interference with the order of nature, forbid an exclusive appropriation by any individual, of the water in a natural water-course, or any unreasonable interruption in the flow. It is said, that the same principle of following the order of nature, should be applied between coterminous proprietors, in determining the right of mere surface drainage. But it is to be observed, that the law has always recognized a wide distinction, between the right of an owner, to deal with surface water falling or collecting on his land, and his right in the water of a natural water-course. In such water, before it leaves his land and becomes part of a definite water-course, the owner of the land is deemed to have an absolute property, and he may appropriate it to his exclusive use, or get rid of it in any way he can, provided only that he does not cast it by drains, or ditches, upon the land of his neighbor; and he may do this, although by so doing he prevents the water reaching a natural water-course, as it formerly did, thereby occasioning injury to mill-owners, or other proprietors on the stream. So also he may by digging on his own land, intercept the percolating waters which supply his neighbor's spring. Such consequential injury gives no right of action. (Acton v. Blundell, 12 M.
W. 324; Rawstron v. Taylor, 11 Exch. 369; Phelps v.Nowlen,
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *149