after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
Tlie several assignments of error present substantially but one question, and that is, whether the district judge erred originally in instructing the commissioners “not to consider any damages that may result to adjacent property of the defendant by reason of any overflow, or any other damages that may result by the construction or operation of said lock and dam.” The anticipated diversion of the current of the stream from one side of the river to the other, thereby inconveniencing the conduct of the business of the High Bridge Lumber Company, and the anticipated raising of the level of the stream causing overflows and a consequent damage to its mill machinery and to the use of its adjacent lands for the purposes of its business, «ire manifestly injuries not directly the result of tlie taking of the small parcel desired by the government, but damage anticipated as consequent upon the construction and maintenance of a lock and dam in ¡he Kentucky river. If the land condemned had been acquired by purchase, the same result to the remainder might be as well anticipated; or, if the condemned parcel had belonged to a different owner, the High Bridge Lumber Company would be subjected to the same class and kind of injuries, as a result of the improvement of the river. The supposed increase of risk from fire during the work of construction belongs to the same class of consequential damages. The question at last is this: Do such damages constitute, within the meaning of the constitutional limitation upon the taking of private property for public uses, any part of the value of the land condemned, or any part of that “just compensation” which the owner is entitled to demand before he can be deprived of his property?
The commissioners have already allowed satisfactory compensation to the owner for any impairment of the value of the remainder of its land by reason of the relation of the part taken to the remainder of the owner’s tract. This was obviously just. A strip carved out of a tract, in such a way as to divide the remainder, might very seriously affect tlie enjoyment of the parts not taken. If thereby the value of the adjacent and remaining land is impaired, such impairment constitutes an element to be considered in assessing the value of that which is condemned. Tlie relation of that taken to tlia,t which is left is, therefore, a proper element to be estimated in
But plaintiff in error insists that the district judge should have gone further by allowing anticipated damages to the remainder consequent upon the use to which the condemned parcel is to be put. Let us consider the purpose for which this land is desired, and the use to which it is to be put. The Kentucky river is a navigable stream, accessible from states other than that in which it lies, and, therefore, within the constitutional powers of congress over the navigable waters of tbe United States. Congress may rightfully open and keep ojien such a river for the public benefit, and may make such improvements as its discretion may dictate for the purpose of maintaining its safe and profitable navigation. Gilman v. Philadelphia,
“The remedy, therefore, for a consequential injury resulting from the state’s action throng a its agents, if there be any, must be that, and. that only, which the legislature shall give. It does not exist at common law. The decisions to which we have referred were made in view of Magna Cbarta, and the restriction to be found in tbe constitution of every state, that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation being made. But acts done in the proper exercise of governmental powers, and not directly encroaching upon private property, though their consequences may impair its use, are universally held not to be a taking within the meaning of the constitutional provision. They do not entitle the owner of such property to compensation from the sta~e or its agents, or give him any right of action. This is supported by an immense weight of authority. Those who are curious to see the decisions will find them collected in Gooley on Constitutional Limitations (page 542 and notes). The extremest qualification of the doctrine is to be found, perhaps, in Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co.,13 Wall. 166 , and in Eaton v. Railroad Co., 51 N. H. 504. In those cases it was held that permanent flooding of private property may he regarded as a ‘taking.’ In those cases there was a physical invasion of the real estate of the private owner, and a practical ouster of his possession.”
One difficulty in all such cases is to determine what are consequential damages, when a part only of a larger parcel belonging to tbe
We have already seen that, under the well-settled common law applicable to such cases, damages not directly consequent upon the “taking,” but incident to or consequent upon the construction and operation of a public improvement in a prudent and skillful manner, are damnum absque injuria, unless such injuries are to be compensated by the terms of the statute under which the work was prosecuted. But the insistence of the plaintiff in error is that, if the increased cost of insurance or the diversion of the current of the stream from one side of the stream to the other be consequential, the injury from overflow will be a “taking,” within the meaning of the constitution. For this the case of Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co.,
What we hold is: First, that a mere temporary flooding, not amounting to a “taking,” and not the result of negligent construction or maintenance, is an injury consequential upon tlxe proper and lawful improvement of a navigable river, and is not such an injury as would be actionable. That such injuries are apprehended in respect of lands of plaintiff in error not condemned gives no greater right to recover than if the purpose was to construct the proposed dam on the land of a third person. Second. To now seek
The case of Van Schoick v. Canal Co., 20 N. J. Law, 249, was a case where a statute controlled the condemnation, and gave the right only upon compensating the owner for all damages sustained. The case turned upon the meaning of the language of the statute requiring an assessment of all “damages sustained by the owner.” The court construed the phrase as contemplating a recovery by the owner of “all damages accruing to the owner of lands from any and every physical effect pr'oduced by the construction and use of the canal, * * * whether they arise from the alteration or destruction of a public or private way, the exclusion or the overflowing of waters, the alteration or change in the current of streams or in the destruction of crops, the deterioration of adjacent lands by leakage, or whatever other damages may result from the natural and physical effects produced by the canal.” The cases cited from the Kentucky courts, including Asher v. Railroad Co.,
The conclusion we reach is (hat the judgment must be affirmed.
