3 Lans. 278 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1870
This action was brought to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the defendant’s throwing shives and the refuse matter of his flax-mill in the stream upon which it was located, and thereby causing injury to the plaintiff, who was the owner of a grist-mill upon the same stream a short distance below the defendant’s flax-mill. There was evidence to show that the shives settled in the pond of the plaintiff, forming a bar which it was claimed caused an obstruction and filled up the dam. There was also some evidence to prove that cattle would not drink in the stream in consequence of the shives being there.
It is insisted by the defendant’s counsel that it appeared that the top of the alleged bar or deposit was lower than the point over which water from the plaintiff’s pond would pass into his flume, and that it is impossible that this deposit could have caused the plaintiff any injury, and he was not entitled to recover, and the judge erred in not so instructing the jury. The judge was requested to charge that if there was sediment at any part of the pond which lies below a point over which the
The court was afterward asked to charge, that if the verdict should be for the plaintiff it should be only for nominal damages; and at .the close' of a long series of requests and responses from the court, a general exception was taken to the refusals to charge/ Assuming that the point is sufficiently raised, the distinct question arises whether the facts presented entitled the plaintiff to recover only nominal damages. The ’court had previously charged, that if the dam was filled up by foreign material, it was plain that the plaintiff could not use it for the purposes for which the pond was constructed; that the plaintiff had a right to get rid of it at the defendant’s expense if it came there through the defendant; and the question was, what sum was reasonable and necessary in getting the deposits out of the pond, so that it could be used as it was originally designed ? The argument of the defendant is, that the plaintiff was not entitled to damages for removing and excavating until it was done, and therefore the jury were misdirected and misled, even if the plaintiff had technically sustained his action.
The question of damages is frequently embarrassing and difficult of solution. The general rule is, that damages, to be recovered, must always be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained of. (2 Green. Ev., | 256 ; Armstrong v. Percy, 5 Wend., 535; Lowner v. Madison County Bank, 6 Hill, 618.) It is often troublesome to apply this rule to practice in all cases, as the line of demarkation
It is also claimed by the defendent’s counsel, that it was but a reasonable and ordinary use of his water privileges, for
It has been held, that the owners of tanneries are liable for injuries caused by tan-bark thrown into the stream, although no injury was intended. (Thomas v. Brockway, 17 Barb.,. 654; Hansee v. Hammond, 39 id.,. 89.)
Within the principle of the cases cited, I think that the use of the stream for the purpose of throwing in the shives, to the injury of the plaintiff, was not justified. It was an unreasonable appropriation of it to the detriment of the proprietor below, and was not a mere incident to the defendant’s situation as a mill owner on the same stream. The cases to which we have been referred to sustain the position of the defendant’s counsel, do not go to the extent claimed, or in any way interfere with the principle adverted to. (See 28 Vermont, 459; 25 Conn., 321; 13 Metcalf, 156.)
Even if it be conceded, that the inconvenience could have been remedied by the plaintiff in the construction of his dam, which is perhaps doubtful, yet the injury having occurred by the deposit of the shives, the plaintiff was entitled to such remuneration as would restore his privilege to its former condition. He had a right to have his mill-pond placed in as favorable a state as it was in, prior to the time when the damages occurred.