2 N.Y. 459 | NY | 1864
The finding of facts by Mr. Justice Bacon must of course be conclusive, as to the existence of the alleged water-course, unless some error was committed in the course of the trial. But the judge refused to give the effect to a certain judgment, and to the award of certain arbitrators, which is claimed for them by the plaintiff. And this raises the only point which we can review upon this appeal. In order to determine the effect of these adjudications, it will be necessary to look into the evidence with some attention. The parties were the owners of adjoining lots, the defendant’s lot lying north of that of the plaintiff The plaintiff formerly owned both lots, but sold the northerly one to the defendant about the year 1850. The shape of the surface of the land showed a slight descent northerly, which would lead the water to flow from the plaintiff’s lot on to and over the defendant’s. The case made by the plaintiff, and proved mainly by his own testimony as a witness, was that many years ago there was a spring on the plaintiff’s land, from "which there issued what the witness called a runlet of water, running through the plaintiff’s lot on to and through the lot after-wards purchased by the . defendant. About eighteen or twenty years before the trial, and about ten years before the defendant purchased his lot, the plaintiff filled up that spring with earth, and then and subsequently levelled the ground by plowing and scraping the earth into it, leaving, however, a depression on the surface to carry off the surface water. ' About two years after the defendant’s purchase .the plaintiff constructed an underground' drain or sewer from the place where the spring had been, running towards the defendant’s lot, having the previous year constructed five small houses near the site of the spring, the foundations and cellars of which were drained by this sewer. The original surface at that place was raised by the plaintiff about two feet by the drawing on of earth, and the bottom of the sewer rested on the original surface.
The defendant’s evidence tended to show that there was never any water-course or channel running from the spring except in wet weather, and it was proved that the defendant excavated the ditch on his lot before the plaintiff constructed his drain. The evidence was clear and uncontradicted that there had not been, since the defendant purchased his lot, nor for several years before, any appearance of a spring, or of a water-course, upon the lots or either of them.
The evidence of the adjudications upon which the plaintiff relied was as follows: S. Earnham, who was a justice of the peace of Watertown, testified that the plaintiff sued the defendant by summons before him, on the 27th of August, 1853. That issue was joined in the suit, and /that
I think the order appealed from ought to be reversed, and judgment absolute be rendered in favor of the defendant, according to. the determination of Mr. Justice Bacon.
The finding of the judge on the, trial of this case was that the plaintiff had failed to show that at the time of the defendant’s purchase of the premises where the supposed stream was obstructed, there was any natural "stream or channel of water that had been accustomed to flow over and across the land, or that the plaintiff had a right to discharge the water from- his premises, across the defendant’s premises.
It is extremely difficult to suppose that the general term reversed this judgment for errors of fact, bic one, from the evidence as given in the case, could suppose the contrary to have been proven. The plaintiff stated that when he bought the land, about 1838, there was a spring on the land, which ran across the land owned by the defendant; that he filled up the spring a year after he bought it; that he built a drain from his house through his garden, and in 1852 continued the drain to the defendant’s line, and drained the cellars of houses he had built, and during this period he had been filling up his own land higher than his neighbor’s. Under such evidence I am at a loss to see how any finding that a natural stream existed there at the time of the sale to the defendant could be sustained. On the contrary, I think the evidence clearly establishes the contrary finding, and that the judge was right on the trial, as to the fact.
Upon the trial the plaintiff relied upon the previous trial before a justice, and upon an arbitration between the parties, which he claimed related to the subject matter of this trial, and was conclusive between them. The judge, at the trial, found that the defendant was not estopped thereby from denying the existence of the water-course, and that the evidence of decisions in those cases was not conclusive f upon the parties in this casé. In this ruling there was no error. The complaint set forth that there had flowed over and across the plaintiff’s premises a stream of water formed
On the trial before Farnham, a justice of the peace, in-1853, the complaint was for obstructing the passage of water over the defendant’s lot. Whether such water came from a spring, or whether it was a right that existed immemorially, or when the obstruction was put there, was not stated. So the matter submitted to arbitration, which was commenced before Emerson, although the complaint was as to a natural water-course, yet after’ the case was submitted to the arbitrators, the decision was made solely as to the drain and its depth and dimensions. ¡Neither of these decisions can be said to establish the existence of a watercourse running over the defendant’s land from time immemo - rial. Certainly, neither of them established that in 1857 the defendant obstructed this drain; or that at the time of that action he maintained any obstruction to the flow of water over the premises. More especially should the defendant be allowed to explain the plaintiff’s evidence, given by himself, on which he relied to establish the existence of such rights; and still more, should he not be concluded by a previous trial in regard to a drain, when the plaintiff himself proved that he had. destroyed such running stream, if it ever existed, by filling it up, more than twenty years previous thereto. If the action had been for obstrupting a drain across the defendant’s premises, from the plaintiffs land, the evidence of the former trials might have been sufficient to establish the plaintiff’s right to maintain the drain, but they would have been evidence of nothing else;
It appears to me that the decision at the trial was right, and that the order of the general term, granting a new trial, was erroneous. As th^ counsel have not claimed that the order of the general term was not made for any error of fact, we, should not avoid doing justice to the parties by terminating litigation, when satisfied that the cause has b,een rightly decided. The order granting a new trial, if on the ground that the judgment is against the weight of evidence, should show that to be the cause. If it does not, and there appears in the case no reason for supposing the decision was for such a cause, we are justified in concluding that the general term decision was made upon the grounds on which the counsel attempt to sustain it in this court.
The order of the general term should be reversed, and the judgment of the special term affirmed.
All the judges concurred, except- Mullin’, J., who had been counsel in the case, and therefore did not sit.
Judgment reversed.