106 Va. 482 | Va. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It appears that the plaintiff in error is the owner of a mill situated on Roanoke creek, in Charlotte county, at Saxe, a station on the Southern railway. About three-quarters of a mile above the mill a dam across the channel of the creek is maintained for the purpose of furnishing water power to the mill. This dam was established, in pursuance of then existing statutes, in the year 1794. One acre of land on the opposite side of the creek was condemned for the construction of an abutment of the dam. The original dam was seventy-five to one hundred yards further down the stream than the present dam, but there is nothing in the record to show that its present location is not within the limits of the one acre which was condemned for its original erection. Its present position was fixed as early as 1876.
This prosecution to abate and remove the dam mentioned, as a public nuisance, was instituted under section 1729a of the Virginia Code (1904). It had its origin in the complaint of five citizens of Charlotte county to the judge of the Circuit Court of that county. The grand jury summoned in response to this complaint brought in a presentment against the plaintiff in error, charging that the maintenance of the dam was a public nuisance. It is alleged that the dam is about one. mile from one public highway and about half a mile from another, and about one mile from the “Experimental Earm” belonging to the state of Virginia. It is further alleged that the plaintiff in error has unlawfully and injudiously permitted the, waters of the Roanoke creek and mill-pond to overflow the adjacent
There was a demurrer to this presentment, which.was overruled by the Circuit Court. This action of the Circuit Court was assigned as error, but the objection was waived at the bar of this court.
The trial resulted in a verdict against the accused, and a judgment thereon imposing a fine of $25.00, and requiring the sheriff of the county to forthwith cause the dam of the plaintiff in error to be cut down and removed from Roanoke creek. A motion in arrest of judgment, and to'set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence, were successively made and overruled; and thereupon the case was brought here for review.
The defendant in error raises the preliminary question that the evidence adduced cannot’ be considered because not made a part of the record by a proper bill of exception. ■
This contention is not tenable. Bill of exception Ho. 9 sets forth, under the seal and signature of the judge, the action .of the couid in refusing to set aside the verdict. Immediately following is this certificate, which is also signed by the judge under seal: “And the court certifies that the following stenographic report of the evidence, made by T. E. Owen, bearing
It is usual, and the better practice, for the evidence tó be set out in the bill of exception before the signature of the judge is .attached, for thereby all question of identification of the evidence is removed; but the failure to do this is not fatal, where, as in the case before as, the certification and identification of the evidence by the court is complete, and it is, as here, in effect made part of the bill of exception. Leftwich v. Licance, 4 Wall. 187, 18 L. Ed. 388.
The point is made by the plaintiff in error that the record •does not show that the finding of the grand jury with respect to the presentment was recorded in the Circuit Court, and therefore it does not appear that it was a true bill; it being •contended that since Cawood’s Case, 2 Va. Cas. 527, it has been held that the record in a criminal case must show affirmatively that the indictment was found as a true bill by the grand jury which originated it; that this omission cannot be supplied by presumption or by inference from other recitals in the record; ■and that the failure to show this by the record will invalidate all •subsequent proceedings in the case.
This is true as to an indictment, but it has never been so held with respect to a presentment such as we have in the case at bar. On the contrary, the practice is, when such a presentment is returned, to set forth the substance of the finding in the order of the court, which has always been deemed sufficient. In the case before us the presentment by the grand jury has been set forth in extenso in the order of the court, entered of
It is, with hesitation, suggested in the petition for a writ of error that section If29a of the code, under which this proceeding was instituted, is in conflict with section 58 of the Virginia constitution, which forbids the taking of private property" for public uses without just compensation.
This is a criminal prosecution against the defendant as a wrongdqer for creating and maintaining an alleged public nuisance, which is declared to be injurious to the public health. The abatement of such a nuisance for the public safety comes-under the police power of the State, and is not a taking of private property for a public use in the sense contemplated by the constitution, for which compensation must be allowed.
The evidence shows that the country claimed to be injuriously affected by the existence of the dam extends from the latter a distance of seven miles above. There is, however, no evidence-that the dam caused refluent or hack-water for that distance; on the contrary, the weight of evidence shows that the dam does not back the water for a greater distance than seven hundred yards, and all the witnesses who speak upon the point seem to-agree that there is no stagnant water in the stream itself, there-being a current extending to the dam. It appears that the-country above the dam, through which Roanoke creek runs, is-naturally low and subject to overflow, resulting in a marshy condition of the adjacent land that renders it practically unfit" for cultivation. It also appears that along- almost the entire-course of the stream about which there is any testimony, varying in extent at different points, there are ponds or pools of water formed in low places from the natural and periodical overflows, which at certain seasons have no outlet and become-stagnant. Most of these pools exist in what was the old bed of Roanoke creek, which is lower than the present bed. This old bed was left as the result of a change in the course of the-stream made by adjoining landowners between the years 1855»
In the case of Com'th v. Webb, 6 Rand. 726, which was a. criminal prosecution for a nuisance caused by a milldam which, produced stagnation in the water of the stream itself, this court held “that to constitute a public nuisance the act done, or duty omitted, must affect injuriously some thing or right in which, the community, as a body politic, have a common interest, and the facts producing this injury and connecting it with such public right or interest must be alleged and proved.” In that case the information contained two counts, the first concluding “to-the great damage and common nuisance of all the good citizens of this Commonwealth, not only those residing, but also going, returning, passing and repassing by the neighborhood of the-said point”; and the second count concluding “to the common nuisance of all the good citizens of the Commonwealth.” Upon a demurrer to the information the court held these averments insufficient, saying that it was necessary to allege and prove-that the nuisance charged affected “a public highway or some-other place in which the public have such special interest.”
It is well settled that the thing or act which is the ground of the prosecution must be shown to be the direct and proximate cause of the nuisance. State v. Rankin, 3 S. C. 438, 16 Am. Rep. 737; State v. Holman, 104 N. C. 861, 10 S. E. 758; Missouri v. Illinois, 200 U. S. 496, 50 L. Ed. 572, 26 Sup. Ct. 268.
The last-named case was an application by the state of Missouri to the Supreme Court for an injunction restraining the* state of Illinois from permitting the city of Chicago to empty"
It is no defense, however, that the nuisance complained of is contributed to by the acts of others over whom the defendant has no control, if there should be a nuisance without such contribution. State v. Holman, 104 W. C. 861, supra.
Bill of exception Wo. 1 is to the action of the court in giving an instruction for the plaintiff, which told the jury, among other things, that if they believed, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the dam in question, for two or three miles above, produced such conditions as caused the people passing to and fro along the public highways in the neighborhood of said creek, dam and mill to become affected with and have malarial diseases, such as chills, fevers and diseases of a like nature, then they must find for the Commonwealth.
This instruction is erroneous for the reason that there is no evidence in the record tending to show that the health of any one traveling on the public highways was affected by the conditions alleged to have been caused by the existence of the dam. No effort seems to have been made by the Commonwealth to show that the public on the highways suffered from the conditions complained of. The evidence for the Commonwealth was limited to the effect upon .the health of persons living in the neighborhood. This court has repeatedly held that instructions must be based upon evidence, and that it is error to give instructions not warranted by the evidence. Va., &c., Co. v. Harris, 103 Va. 708, 717, 49 S. E. 991; Rocky Mount Trust Co. v. Price, 103 Va. 298, 49 S. E. 73.
Bill of exception Wo. 2 is to the action of the court in refusing to give the following instruction asked for by the defendant: “The court further instructs the jury that a milldam lawfully established is not prima facie a nuisance.”
Section 3868, Virginia Code (1904), in defining what obstructions in a water course shall be deemed a nuisance, expressly excepts a dam used to “work a mill, manufactory, or other machine or engine useful to the public, and is allowed by law or order of court.”
The defendant was, therefore, entitled to have the jury told that the mere maintenance of a dam upon its property, erected in accordance with law, created no presumption against it, and no burden to be overcome by it. Proof of the existence of such a dam did not relieve the Commonwealth of the obligation to show a nuisance in fact.
Passing over other assignments of error not likely to arise on another trial, or practically disposed of in dealing with other questions, we come now to consider whether or not the evidence supports the verdict.
The presentment charges that on account of the conditions created by the dam “the air became corrupted and infected, causing malignant fevers, chills and other loathsome diseases,” resulting, as alleged, in injury, etc. It is not claimed that the alleged accumulation of stagnant water along the stream produces disagreeable smells, or is otherwise offensive to the senses, but the single ground of complaint is the dissemination of the diseases named, by a corruption of the air. It appears from the expert evidence introduced on behalf of the Commonwealth that this is not a fact. On the contrary it is shown that the pollution of the atmosphere has nothing to do with the generation of the diseases mentioned, but that according to the universally accepted theory such diseases are due to the bite of the mosquito, which innoculates the victim with a poison carried in its system. This was not alleged in the presentment, and the'
The greatest difficulty, however, in the way of sustaining the judgment complained of is that the evidence fails to show that the dam is the direct and proximate cause of the alleged nui-' sanee, or that it is responsible for the conditions which, it is charged, produced the nuisance complained of. As already stated, there is no stagnant water in the stream itself; but the trouble arises, it is said, from the nearby stagnant pools of water that exist throughout the course of the stream. These pools are formed for the most part in what was once the bed of the qreek, left when the channel of the stream was changed many years ago. The dam cannot be charged with responsibility for this condition. Even if the dam alone were the cause of the ■frequent overflows, which is not established, it is not responsible for the low places that collect and permit the stagnation of the water. These conditions can be as easily, if not more readily, .accounted for by the numerous other obstructions shown to be in the stream as by the dam.
We are of opinion that the evidence in this case, which has been very briefly reviewed, fails to show that the dam is the proximate cause of the diseases complained of, or that it, and not other facts and conditions, is responsible for the alleged nuisance which the Commonwealth has sought to abate. It re- ■ quires very clear and convincing proof to sustain a prosecution like this, where the result is to destroy valuable rights and property held, as this is, under specific authority of law. In a number of cases, and of a class not requiring the degree of proof
Eor these reasons the judgment of the Circuit Court must he reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial not in conflict with this opinion.
Beversed.