16 N.Y.S. 714 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The referee found as facts that Canacedea creek is a non-navigable stream of water, flowing in a north-easterly direction, and in nearly a. straight course, between Main and Genesee streets, in the city of Hornellsville, N. Y., and was so May 31, 1889, except as obstructed and dammed by the defendant’s piling in the rear of his lot; that the plaintiff was the owner .n fee, on May 31, 1889, of a lot of land lying upon the southerly side and adjacent to said creek, opposite the land of the defendant; that the average width of the channel of the creek was originally about 140 feet, with low and sloping banks between Main and West Genesee streets, and that in time of ordinary high water or freshets the waters of the creek were accustomed to-, overflow the banks thereof, and to cover the land generally north of the stream or adjacent to its left bank, some 100 feet from its present location and channel, and that at such times there was some overflow of the lands of the plaintiff; that the bed of the stream between the streets mentioned had been from time to time changed to the south by the filling in of the land upon the-northerly side thereof; that the plaintiff and his grantors had driven piles, along the bank of the creek adjacent to his lands, opposite and above and below the defendant’s lands, and covered the same with plank, and raised the-bank along the creek on his lands, to protect the same, and prevent the stream from further encroaching upon and washing away his land; that such planking did not impede, obstruct, or hinder the flow of the water in the-creek as it was originally accustomed to flow; that during the summer of 1888 the defendant drove, and caused to be driven, on the north-westerly side-of the creek, and opposite the plaintiff’s land, a number of piles, and caused and procured others to be driven along the bank of the creek above and below his premises, extending and projecting south-easterly into the channel of the-creek á distance of from 23 to 30 feet, the same being slightly curved, and that the piles were higher above the ground than the plaintiff’s land on the-opposite bank; they were sheeted with plank from the bottom to the top of " the pile-i, and that he filled in in the rear of the embankment with dirt, stone, and rubbish nearly to the height of the planking, and so constructed it as to-prevent the flowing of the water of the creek through the obstruction, and formed by the piling and embankment a solid dam or obstruction extending into-the channel of the creek as it then flowed, and obstructing the flow of the water for nearly one-third of its width as it existed before the embankment was-
We think the referee’s findings of fact and law are sustained by the evidence. The plaintiff, as owner of lands upon the creek, was entitled to have the waters of the stream pass along without unnecessary obstruction. The appellant contends that the freshet was of such an unusual character that his client should not be held responsible, as such a freshet could not have been expected to occur. The cases referred to by appellant’s counsel to sustain this doctrine have no application here. If his piling had been rightfully placed where it was, the question would then have been presented whether he had used reasonable care in its construction. But the doctrine invoked by the appellant does not apply where the obstruction is a nuisance, and unlawful, as in this case. He had no right to create a nuisance, and speculate as to the probable consequences of Ills act. Salisbury v. Herchenroder, 106 Mass. 458, and the cases there referred to. The evidence, moreover, tends to-show that the creek had been as high on several other occasions, and that such freshets were likely to occur. The appellant contends that the embankment of the owners of land adjoining the defendant’s contributed to the damage sustained by the plaintiff, and that it was error to find that the defendant was responsible for the entire damages. The difficulty with this contention is that the evidence tended to show, and the referee has found, that the embankment of the defendant was the sole cause of the injury to the plain