3 N.J. Eq. 417 | New York Court of Chancery | 1836
The bill- was filed in'this case in July last, for an- injunction* to restrain the defendants from farther building and completing a dam, then in progress,; in Salem creek. The injunction was sought-on the ground that valuable meadows and property of the complainants were seriously affect* ed by the obstruction which had been placed in the stream, and that, if the defendants were permitted to continue and complete it, the meadows would be irreparably injured. After- a full hearing of the parties on the application, affidavits having been taken on both sides, an injunction was ordered. The court was satisfied that serious injury had been suffered by the complainants, and the weight of evidence went to show that if the dam was completed and made tight, the injury would be increased and become irreparable. It was strongly insisted at the time by the defendants, that the flow of water upon the meadows was occasioned by unusually heavy rains, which fe'ÍE on. the twelfth and fifteenth of July, and not by the obstruction in the creek; and that the completion of the dam would not seriously injure the meadows. Hence the court, in delivering the opinion, took occasion to state, that if it should turn out, as the defendants supposed and believed, that the injurious overflow was occasioned, not by the dam, but by the rains which had lately inundated that part of the country, and was therefore accidental' and'temporary \ or if the defendants could, at some future time, make it appear that the completion and filling in of their dam would'not raise the water so as permanently and'seriously to affect the property of the complainants, the injunction might be dissolved, and'the complainants turned over to their legal remedies.
The defendants having filed an answer to the bill, moved to dissolve the injunction on the answer. This was refused by the court, for reasons heretofore given,-and the cause was’ brought ora. for final hearing in January-
In this the court hás been disappointed. Upon each point there is great diversity of sentiment. Upwards of sixty witnesses have been examined, some of them at great length, and an immense volume of testimony has been taken, some-of which, however, has hut a «mote beating upon the issues.
The cause was elaborately and ably argued, and I have endeavored to give to it a careful examination. And,
Upon the first point, to wit, whether the meadows of the complainants had been seriously affected by the overflow, I think the evidence proves that they were injuriously affected during the last season, or a part of it, by water standing upon them. That matter was proved before the injunction was allowed, in August, and the weight of the evidence now before the court confirms it. It .is fully shown that>they ¡were-considerably inundated, and for a longer period of time than usual, and at a season of the year when the effect must necessarily have been injurious. It will be unnecessary to dwell on this part of the case, as it is not important.
Upon the second point, whether the injury sustained was continuous, the result of some abiding cause, or temporary, occasioned b.y unusually heavy rains and back-water, there is great difference of opinion. Aad this I take to be the great question in the cause. These meadows, before the dam or stopping, were liable to be overflowed occasionally from rains and freshets, but the water soon ran off, and the injury, if any, was temporary. These overflows would vary according to the quantity of rain-or
Respectable men differ widely on the subject. Some insist, and with a knowledge derived from personal observation too, that the meadows were no more wet than in former years, except just at the period of the heavy rains, and that those rains passed off without material damage; and some think they were drier;— while others most positively affirm that the meadows were seriously injured, not owing to heavy rains and back-water, but to the height of water in the creek; that the dam prevented the tide above from falling to its ordinary level by one and a half or two feet, and some say two and a half feet, in consequence of which the waters could not be drained off the meadows; that the sluices could not play, the water even at low tide being higher in the creek than in the ditches, and of course there was no vent; and that the waters continue to injure the meadows, though not so much now, since the dam has settled.
I have sought with great solicitude to reconcile the testimony, but without success. The fact that the tide, since the erection of the dam, does not rise so high nor fall so low as before, is most clearly established. It admits of no dispute. The plain inference from this fact would seem to be, that the meadows cannot be so well drained as before. It is proved that they are low and flat. They can be drained only by sluices leading the water from them into the creek. If when the creek fell to its ordinary level at low water, they were not more than sufficiently drained, how can it
My ow'n inference would be, that these meadows, being low, must sustain permanent injury in consequence of the tide not falling as low as formerly ; and with this inference the complainants’ witnesses accord. But they are met by positive testimony on the other side, affirming that no such result has taken place, and that the meadows have been, taking the season through, as dry as formerly. And I feel embarrassed in forming a judgment that is to decide the rights of these parties to a very large amount. I am relieved to know that there is a mode in which the facts can be ascertained, and the conscience of the court informed. It is a fact the decision of which, under all the circumstances of the case, is peculiarly proper for the decision of a jury. I am opposed to the practice of sending ordinary matters to a jury for their decision, and think it should be discouraged ; but in important cases, where the evidence of respectable witnesses, with the same means of information, is contradictory, so as to raise serious doubts on the mind of the court, it is proper to direct an issue, or order a suit at law. In this case I think an issue w'ould best answer the purposes of justice. It would be more expeditious, and more under the control of the court; and if the facts be once ascertained, whether the erection be or be not a nuisance, there will be little difficulty in settling the case.
I shall, therefore, direct an issue to be made up in the usual way, to try the fact, whether the erection of the dam by the de
Where witnesses are dead, or.cannot be procured, their examinations may be read; and no new witnesses shall be produced without giving fifteen days notice of the intention to produce them, with the name, addition and place of abode of such' witnesses.'
.Order accordingly.