37 W. Va. 604 | W. Va. | 1893
This is an action on the case, instituted by LI. Fry & Sons against tlicj Campbell’s Creek Coal Company, for damages done to the plaintiffs, claiming to be the owners of a certain landing or harbor situated on the south side of the Great- Kanawha river. The defendant demurred to the declaration on the sole ground that the plaintiff could not have such ownership in a landing or harbor along such river, a navigable river being a public highway, as would entitle them to maintain a suit for damages done thereto. The Circuit Court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the suit, and the plaintiffs applied for and obtained a writ of error.
Eor the purposes of the demurrer every material allegation of the declaration must be taken to be true. Ownership in the plaintiffs is plainly alleged, and also negligence on the part of the defendant. Chapter 43, ss. 40, 41, of the Code, provides for the establishment of such necessary aids to navigation outside of incorporated cities, towns, and villages, and even at a place where a public landing is al
In what manner and whether such ownership has been acquired lawfully are .matters of proof. The lawful ownership or occupancy being established, it follows, as a matter of course, that the lawful owner or occupier of such landing or wharf is entitled to the enjoyment of his property undisturbed by the unlawful, overt or negligent acts or omissions of others. Any obstruction that renders the waters adjacent to such landing unnavigable deprives the owner thereof of the use of the same, and destroys the value of his property; and if such obstructions are placed there unlawfully, either by the overt act or negligence of another, the owner is entitled to compensation for the loss of his landing, or the expense of removing such obstructions.
In the case of Brayton v. City of Fall River, 113 Mass. 218, 230, it was held: “The owner of a wharf can maintain an action for an obstruction adjoining the wharf which prevents vessels from lying at it in the accustomed manner, this being a particular damage.” *' * * “He has a right to the water at its natural depth.” * * * “Suppose a person had tipped stones off his wlxai’f, forming a pile which prevented any profitable use of it. It would be an obstruction to navigation, and to that extent the injury would be a common one to all the public. But the plaintiff wou'd suffer an injury, in the hindrance of the use of his property, to which no one else would be exposed.”
We therefore reach the conclusion that the Circuit Court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and for this reason the judgment is reversed, and demurrer overruled, and the case is remanded to be further proceeded in according to law.
REVERSED. Remanded.