46 N.J. Eq. 183 | New York Court of Chancery | 1889
The complainant seeks protection against injury from surface-water. His bill alleges that the defendants have changed the ancient course of the surface-water flowing along certain public roads and caused it to be so discharged as to overflow his lands. He alleges that he suffers injury at two different points, and that each results from the illegal acts of the defendants.
Mount Pleasant avenue extends from the crest of the Orange mountain to near the southerly foot of the mountain, where, notwithstanding the highway continues in the same direction, it ceases to be called Mount Pleasant avenue and is called Condit street. At the point where this highway ceases to be called an avenue and becomes a street, Fairmount avenue, a street running
The other point of injury is on Northfield avenue. The ditch already mentioned, as having been constructed to drain the lands now owned by the complainant and lands owned by others, crosses Northfield avenue. Where it crosses the avenue a county bridge was built in 1855, and eyelets were put in the bridge to carry the water flowing along the avenue into the ditch. Main street intersects a public highway, called Valley road, nearly oppo
The case made by the bill has been adjudged by this court, and likewise by the court of errors and appeals, to be sufficient to entitle the complainant to relief. Field v. West Orange, 9 Stew. Eq. 118; S. C. on appeal, 10 Stew. Eq. 600. The broad doctrine declared by some courts — that no right of any kind can be claimed in 'the flow of surface-water, and that neither its retention, diversion, repulsion or altered transmission will constitute an actionable injury — has never been adopted, in all its length and breadth, in this state. The supreme court has, however, held that, where damage results to an individual from the. discharge of surface-water upon his land, in consequence of the proper exercise of power granted to a municipality to make and grade highways, no legal liability exists. Injury may be suffered, but in such case no damages can be recovered. Town of Union ads. Durkes, 9 Vr. 21.
In the case just cited a street was opened extending from the foot of a hill over its crest. At the top of the hill it was necessary, in order to give the street a suitable grade, to sink the road
The court of errors and appeals, in deciding upon the adequacy of the complainant’s case, as exhibited in his bill, to entitle him to relief, expressly affirmed the doctrine laid down in Town of Union ads. Durhes, but pointed out a notable distinction between that case and the case presented by the complainant’s bill. The distinction is this: The injury complained of in Town of Union ads. Durhes was caused by the discharge of surface-water at the point where the. grade of the street compelled its discharge — it could not be discharged elsewhere unless the grade of the street was changed — while in this case, it is alleged that the water is prevented from following the grade of the streets, and is collected from a large district of country and carried, by artificial means, to a point where it would n.ot otherwise go, and is there discharged, in large volume and with great force, on the complainant’s land. Mr. Justice Van Syckel, speaking for the court, says: “The authorities are quite uniform in holding that no responsibility attaches for damage done by the diversion of surface-water by the public authorities, where the diversion is merely incidental to and occasioned by the making or alteration of street grades. The injury complained of in this case is not that consequent upon the alteration of grades, but flows from a
The defendants were empowered by an act passed in 1870 to improve the highways of West Orange by grading and paving. P. L. of 1870 p. 468. Under the authority of that act, they, in 1871, caused the several highways mentioned in the bill to be macadamized and guttered. They deny, by their answer, that in making the improvement any change whatever was made in the course of the flow of the surface-water along any of the highways ; they say, on the contrary, that they were careful to avoid any change in that respect, and endeavored to keep the water in its ancient courses and cause it to be discharged at the points where it had long been discharged. They further say that, if the complainant’s lands are flooded, his injury is the result of the unfortunate position of his lands, they being lower than the surrounding lands, combined with the fact that this improvement, like all others of like character, necessarily resulted in discharg
The case is now reduced to a simple contest of fact. And the first question to be decided is, Have the defendants arrested the water flowing along the northerly side of Mount Pleasant avenue, and prevented it from following the grade of the street, and, by artificial means, turned it aside from where it would otherwise have gone, and discharged it so near complainant’s land as to compel his land to receive it?. The complainant, it will be remembered, says that the ancient course of this water was not down Eairmount avenue, but down Condit street. The very pith of his grievance, in respect to this water, is, that the defendants, in making the improvement of 1871, constructed a gutter, just at the point where Mount Pleasant avenue ends and Condit street ■commences, by which the water was led from the north side of the avenue to the south side, and from thence carried down .Fair-mount avenue. Is the complainant right in his statement of fact? Was the course of the water, prior to 1871, down Condit ¡street? Eighteen witnesses have given evidence on this point, five for the complainant and thirteen for the defendants. One of the five called by the complainant says that he will not state, as a positive fact, that the water flowing down the northerly side of Mount Pleasant avenue, when it reached Condit street, continued on down Condit street, but it is his impression that that was the fact; another says that he does not know that he ever saw the water accumulated above Condit street flow down Condit
This brings us to the second question of fact presented by the case, which is, Have the defendants made such change in the course of the flow of the water flowing, down Main street as entitles the complainant, under the legal rule above stated, to relief? It will be remembered, that he alleges that the ancient course of this water was down Valley road, and not down North-field avenue, and that he charges, as the cause of his injury, that the defendants, by the construction of'a gutter across Valley road, have led the water down Northfield avenue and discharged it into his ditch, and thus cast upon his land a large quantity of water which would not otherwise have gone there. The wrongful act in this instance, as in the other, consists in turning the water out of that course which it would take if allowed to follow the declivity of the streets, and by that means throwing upon the complainant’s land a large quantity of water which, but for such change, would have gone elsewhere. The evidence respecting this grievance leaves it almost as certain as it is in respect to the other ground of complaint, that the complainant is wrong in his facts. Fifteen witnesses have testified as to the course of the water flowing down Main street, six on the part of the complainant and nine for the defendants.. Five of those called by the complainant say that the course of this water was down Valley road until 1872 or 1873, when the defendants turned it down Northfield avenue, and that until such change was made none went down Northfield avenue, except in times of freshets or floods. Another says that the original course of the water was
The facts on which the complainant grounds his right to relief have not, in my judgment, been proved; his bill must, therefore, be dismissed, with costs.