3 Cai. Cas. 307 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1805
A motion has been made on the part of the plaintiffs for a new trial on two grounds. 1st. That the verdict is against the weight of evidence, and 2d, on discovery of new evidence.
The plaintiffs’ witnesses generally accorded in saying, that the only injury to the plaindffs by the erection of the defendants’ dam, is this, that it occasioned additional labor and expense to the plaintiffs to carry logs into their dam. None of them pretend thatthere has been any diver
It is conceded that the plaintiffs and defendants own the lands respectively on the bank of the river, opposite their mills and dams.
Whether the Hudson river be considered as a public highway, or the bed of it as belonging to the owners of the adjacent shores, will not, I think, vary the \result. — - I cannot, however, but consider it as a common highway, independent of its being navigable witli small craft and rafts above the place in dispute, the legislature have con, stantly considered this river as public, and common to all the citizens of the state above tide water, and above Still-water. They have granted islands in this river at Glens Falls, and in the town of Greenwich, in Washington county.
The act declaring certain waters highways not extending to this river, has been considered as impliedly sanctioning the idea that it is not public property; I should draw the contrary inference, for if the legislature have declared such.rivers as the Qonhocton, the Unadilla, the east branch of the Chenango, and the great variety,of other inland waters, public highways, as necessary to the public convenience, it must have been taken for granted, that the Hudson river was already a pjiblic highway, and needed not an act declaring, it to be so. If then this river is to be deemed a highway, the erection of both dams are nuisances, 'and it is questionable whether the plaintiffs can, without right or title, complain that the defendants’ nuisance is injurious to their nuisance ; but on this point it is unnecessary to express an opinion,
If this river be considered as private property, belong; ingto the owners of the adjacent shores, the plaintiffs caii-not maintain their action from the evidence before us ; because there is no pretence of the waters being diverted ; the use of the plaintiffs’ property is rendered less commo
In determining this cause, I am willing to admit that the erection of the plaintiffs’ mills and dam is not only no nuisance or obstruction to the river, but a public as well as private benefit. Still I am not satisfied of their right to recover. Whatever their pretensions to build a dam and mills adjoining their own land may have been, it must be conceded that, as far as the public are concerned, the defendants had the same right opposite their ground, provided it could be done without injury to the navigation of the river. This is not pretended to be the case, but as the plaintiffs’ mills were first erected, it Is said, that if the defendants have any right of this kind, they must so use it as not to injure their neighbours. Without denying this position, which is indeed become a familiar maxim, its operation must be restrained within reasonable bounds so as not to deprive a man of the en
I will only add, that the further testimony which is expected from Schuyler, will not change what appears to me the merits of this cause.
Neither, therefore, as a verdict against evidence, nor on the ground of newly discovered evidence, can I consent to a new trial.
On the argument, the right of the plaintiffs, to maintain an action, even admitting them to have sustained an injury, has been called in question, because as is alleged, their mills being erected on a public river, are in. judgment of law-a nuisance. How far this allegation is founded in point of fact, is not now a subject of inquiry; that is a question between the public and the plaintiffs, and cannot be tried in this collateral way, 4 Bur. 2163. Har. Law Tracts, 8. 9. It is a fact of public notoriety, and therefore proper to be assumed as such, that the tide does not ebb and flow as high up the Hudson river, as the place in question ; and therefore, the land under the water is, I apprehend, as much the subject of a private grant, as the land adjoining the river, subject however, to be used by the public for the purposes of boating, and rafting, and other objects of this description, as far as shall be necessary for public use and accommodation, Har. Law Tracts, S. 9. These are the rules and distinctions adopted by Hargrave„ and which appear to me to be just and reasonable. The right thus claimed by the plaintiffs, being a subject of private and individual interest, we have only to look to the facts in the case, to see how far the plaintiffs have established this right in themselves, and without examining such fact in detail, I
I have not thought it necessary, to say any thing respecting the newly discovered testimony, because I do not consider that the evidence on the trial, could afford any presumption of an abandonment, or dereliction by the plaintiffs, or those under whom they claim, of the right to the use of the water as formerly enjoyed. If any doubt, however, could arise on that subject, it would, I think, be removed by the affidavit accompanying the present application.
The first object of inquiry, as arising upon this case is, whether the fact proved by the plantiffs will authorise a recovery ?
The plaintiffs, and those from whom they derive title, own the land on the Hudson river at Stillwater, and liad for upwards of thirty years before the erection of the dam complained of, owned and enjoyed a grist and saw-mill upon that river. The Hudson at Stillwater is a fresh river, not navigable in the common law sense of the term, for the tide does not ebb and flow at that place. In the case of the Royal Fishery, in the river Banne, Davies Rep. 152, 155, 157. it was resolved, that by the rules and authorities of the common law, every river where the sea does not ebb and flow was an inland river not navigable, and belonged to the owners of the adjoining soil. This case was cited by Mr. Justice Tates, in Carter v. Murcot, 4 Burr, 2162. as a very good case, and a solid authority, and in that latter case recognized this distinction between rivers navigable and not navigable, and in the King v. Wharton, 12 Mod. 510. Lord Holt laid down the
It is not stated whether the river %vas, or was not' excepted out of the grants under which the parties, in this suit, hold their property. The case admits that the right of the premises, whatever it is, was in the plaintiffs, and we have seen that the river at the place in question is susceptible of being granted without any public inconvenience, because the right of the public, to the use of the water for
If a right of action in the plaintiffs be assumed, I think this a case proper for the interference of the court. The verdict is clearly against evidence. The plaintiffs had eight witnesses who established the fact that the dam and mills of the defendants did materially injure and disturb the plaintiffs. One witness estimated the damage from $90 to $100 a year. The four witnesses on the part of the defendants do not attempt any direct contradiction of this fact. They prove only that the plaintiffs had felt inconveniences before the erection of the defendants’ dam, but they do not deny but that these inconveniences have been increased.
For these reasons I am of opinion that the verdict ought to be set aside.