104 Ind. 173 | Ind. | 1885
Lead Opinion
There are four paragraphs in the appellant’s complaint, and to all of them demurrers were sustained.
The lock and appurtenances did not belong to the appel
If there is any cause of action in the appellant, it must rest upon the ground that he has acquired a right to have the artificial structures, the lock, abutments, and embankments remain unchanged. If there were an express contract vesting in him this right, there would be comparatively little difficulty in the case, but ño such contract exists, and we are1 to examine what grounds, if any there are, upon which the asserted cause of action can be justly placed.
It is said that one riparian owner must so use the waters of a stream as not to injure other proprietors. We grant this proposition as applied to natural streams, but it does not meet this case. Angell Watercourses, sections 332, 335, 339; Hebron G. R. Co. v. Harvey, 90 Ind. 192 (46 Am. R. 199); Pence v. Garrison, 93 Ind. 345; Harris v. Macintosh., 133 Mass. 228. The question here is, not as to the right to divert the waters of a) natural stream, but as to the right to remove artificial structures and embankments erected in changing the state of a' natural stream, and thus restore the stream to its original condition. To such a case the doctrine found in Pence v. Garrison, supra, and 1 High on Injunctions, sections 794, 815, does not apply.
Eliminating, as we have done, the irrelevant arguments advanced, and clearing the case of matters foreign to its merits, we find the real question to be this, has the appellant a right to have continued the artificial structures which so changed the natural watercourse as to protect his land from injury?
Upon this question the law is with the appellant. There are two reasons for this conclusion. Of these in their order: First. The long acquiescence in the change made in 1838 precludes a restoration of the stream and its surroundings to their original condition.
Our proposition is well supported by authority. Middleton v. Gregorie, 2 Rich. (S. C.) 631, is a well reasoned
In Woodbury v. Short, 17 Vt. 387, it was held, that, after ten years’ acquiescence in the change of a natural stream, a riparian owner can not restore a stream to its original condition where it would injure another owner. The subject received more careful consideration in the case of Ford v. Whitloch, 27 Vt. 265, whei’e it was said: “But if the diversion affects other proprietors favorably, and the party on whose land the diversion is made acquiesces in the stream running in the new channel,-for so long a time that new rights may be presumed to have accrued, or have in fact accrued, in faith of the new state of the stream, the party is bound by such acquiescence, and can not return the stream to its former
Of the second reason, for our proposition: Where land is acquired for a public purpose, as a canal, railroad, or the like, direct benefits to the owner from its construction are deemed part of the consideration paid by the corporation acquiring the right to construct the public work. This was so under the act which created the Whitewater Canal Company and endowed it with corporate powers. McIntire v. State, 5 Blackf. 384; State v. Digby, 5 Blackf. 543; Vanblaricum v. State, 7 Blackf. 209. If embankments and abutments essential to the construction and maintenance of the canal did protect the appellant’s land from overflow, they were to that extent a benefit, and the presumption is that this benefit' was taken into consideration, for the ordinary rule is, that a ■contract for a right of way for a canal, or a condemnation for that purpose and the assessment of damages, includes all ■direct benefits and damages, thus precluding an owner from maintaining a subsequent action for damages. Where the use of land is continued for such a period as to permit the running of the statute of limitations, the presumption is that all damages were assessed and paid. The Brookville, etc., Co. v. Butler, 91 Ind. 134 (46 Am. R. 580); Nelson v. Fleming, 56 Ind. 310. The same principle must apply here; it must be presumed that the long acquiescence of the owner of the fee was due, in part at least, to the benefit which accrued to his land from the embankments and structures constructed by the canal company.
If the appellee or his grantors had in no way consented to the erection of the embankments, he would not be bound by the act of the canal company, but consent was originally given to the change in the state of the watercourse, and for a long series of years the change was acquiesced in by all who were interested in the matter.. The building of the dam, the digging of the channel of the canal, the construction of the lock, and the erection of the embankments, were parts of one-general undertaking, in which the canal company and the adjoining owners were interested and to which they mutually consented.
Where a defendant is undertaking to destroy an existing watercourse, or to wrongfully change the existing state of the stream, so as to materially injure the plaintiff’s land, the latter is entitled ,to an injunction. Pence v. Garrison, supra; Oliver v. New York Bay Cem. Co., 38 N. J. Eq. 109 Gould Waters, section 513.
Where a cause is submitted by agreement, a motion to dismiss on the ground that notice of the appeal has not been given to co-parties, comes too late to be of avail. 2 Works Pr., section 1094, auth. n.; People’s Savings Bank v. Finney 63 Ind. 460; Field v. Burton, 71 Ind. 380; Easter v. Severin, 78 Ind. 540; Hendricks v. Frank, 86 Ind. 278; Martin v. Orr, 96 Ind. 491.
Judgment reversed.
Filed Sept. 24, 1885.
Rehearing
On Petition for a Rehearing.
No brief was filed on the merits of the case until after the opinion was filed, although the cause was sub
It is now said that there was no ruling on the demurrer to the first paragraph of the complaint. There is some confusion in the record, but we think that it shows that the amended complaint supplanted the original, and that it was to all the paragraphs of this amended complaint that the demurrer was sustained. At all events, judgment upon demurrer went against the appellant upon all the paragraphs of his complaint, and this was clearly error, for it certainly is wrong to render judgment upon demurrer, where there is one good paragraph of a complaint unchallenged. It is manifestly error to render judgment against a plaintiff on demurrer, if he has one good paragraph of complaint on file. Whether we regard the amended complaint as entirely supplanting the original, or whether we hold that there was one good paragraph unchallenged, there was material error. But there is error properly assigned upon the ruling on the demurrer to each of the four paragraphs of the complaint, and, as these were all good, the judgment was erroneous, for the general rule is that a party is entitled to a reversal if a demurrer is wrongfully sustained to any one of the paragraphs of his complaint.
It is said that the appellee’s land ought not to be burdened for the benefit of the appellant’s land, for the reason that the land of the latter is in Ohio. We regard it as quite clear that our courts may prevent a wrong to a citizen of another State in cases where the wrong consists in doing an act upon land within our jurisdiction.
Petition overruled.