19 N.J. Eq. 245 | New York Court of Chancery | 1868
The application is for an injunction to restrain the defendants from raising their dam across the Great Egg Harbor river, at May’s Landing, in the county of Atlantic. That river is not navigable above the dam, which was erected by Jeremiah Stull, by authority of an act of the legislature, approved March 4th, 1846. The complainant owns a suitable site for a mill dam and water power, on said river, at a point one hundred and ninety chains, ill a direct line, above the dam of the defendants, and owns the lands on both sides of the river above that point, so as to have the right to erect a dam and overflow them. The fall of the river at this point, which he designates as his mill site, would be eleven feet.
The defendants, Wood, R. D. Green, and G. R. Green, with two other persons, were, by an act approved April 3d, 1867, incorporated by the name of The May’s Landing Water Power Company, and that corporation is the other defendant.
The defendants were authorized by their charter “ to raise
The old Stull dam, it is alleged by the complainant, raises the water at his mill site within ninety-seven hundredths of a foot of its natural level. He charges that the defendants intend to raise their dam four feet above its former height, by which the water at his mill site will be raised more than three feet above its natural level, and the value of his mill site greatly impaired, or entirely destroyed.
The complainant owns a tract of several acres, which was overflowed by the back water, caused by the dam as originally erected by Stull. In August, 1856, by deed, he agreed with Nixon, who then owned the dam, that he and his representatives might maintain the dam, and overflow his lands, with a proviso that nothing therein contained should be construed to authorize the increase of the head of water beyond the capacity of the dam as then constructed.
The act of 1846, and the charter of the defendants, both provided for the assessment and payment of damages for lands overflowed by the erection or raising of the dam, before the water should be raised, unless the use or purchase of the land had been agreed for with the owners. But neither act authorized the taking of any water power, or the assessment of damages, or any compensation for any water power taken or injured by the raising of the water.
The defendants have not caused any appraisement of the damages to the land of the complainant, situate below his mill site, and already overflowed, to be made or tendered; and he contends that the proviso in the grant to Nixon, of the right to overflow, is a condition, the breach of which for
The complainant also contends that the enterprise of the defendant is a private enterprise; and that property taken for it is in no sense taken for public use, and that it cannot be taken by exercise of the power of eminent domain.
The defendants, by their answer, deny that they intend to raise their dam and water works above the natural surface of the water in the river, at the point one hundred and ninety chains above the dam, in a straight line, and that they have done anything for the purpose of raising it higher than that level. They admit that they intend to raise it to that level, but not until they have acquired the right to overflow all additional lands overflowed by such raising, in the manner authorized by law.
The first, and principal question in the cause, regards the flowing back of the water beyond the complainant’s mill site, so as to injure the value of the water power that belongs to him as the owner of the adjacent land. His right begins at the distance of one hundred and ninety chains, in a direct line, from the Stull dam. He is entitled to have the water pass from his land at this point at its natural level, without being raised or obstructed by any artificial change by erections below. The charter of the defendants grants them the right to raise their dam and water works to that level. The object of this limitation evidently was not to authorize any infringement upon rights beyond that point, whether upon compensation, or otherwise; no compensation is provided for injury to water power. The act must be construed so as to authorize the raising of the water in the dam or pond, at that point, to its natural level; such is evidently the intention from the whole act taken together. The word dam is used in two different senses. It properly means the work or structure, raised to obstruct the flow of the water in a river; but by a well settled usage, it is often applied to designate the pond of
The counsel for both parties very properly agree, that the natural surface of the water means the surface at the ordinary height of the water, without regard to freshets or
The grant to Nixon does not amount to a contract on his part, that he, or his representatives, will not raise the water higher than it then was, as ingeniously contended for on be'half of the defendants. It is only a proviso, or rather, what Lord Coke calls a protestation, the exclusion of a conclusion. The words clearly show it. “ Nothing, however, shall be construed to authorize” raising the dam. It is neither a contract nor a condition, but a precaution, providing against any extended construction of the grant.
This grant, clearly, with this proviso, does not authorize raising the water over these lands. I think it would not without the proviso. The injury complained of to these drowned lands, already overflowed by consent of the owners, is, that the water will be raised a few inches, or perhaps a few feet upon them without the consent of the owner. If the act, so far as it authorizes the overflowing of lands without the owner’s consent, is unconstitutional; or is so because it does not provide any compensation for raising higher the water on lands overflowed by the first dam; or if it sufficiently appears that the defendants intend to raise the water without first making compensation, yet, it does not appear to me to be a proper case for interference by preliminary injunction. The injury is not great or irreparable; on the contrary, it is so small as to be hardly appreciable. There is a class of cases where this court will interfere by
The injunction must be denied.