37 N.Y. 472 | NY | 1868
This action is brought to recover damages for injuries, caused by keeping and maintaining the defendant's railroad track, and ditches along the side thereof, in such manner as to cause the water to flow back upon land belonging to plaintiff.
George M. Barnes, being then owner of said farm, conveyed, on the 27th August, 1852, to the Buffalo and Lockport Railroad company, a strip of land four rods wide through the same, on which the railroad was constructed. The defendant, by the consolidation of several railroad companies, under the act of 1854, succeeded to all the rights of the Buffalo and Lockport Railroad company to said strip of land, and to its railroad. On the 3d of August, 1853, Barnes conveyed said farm to the plaintiff, consisting of about one hundred and twenty acres, subject to the right of way of the Buffalo and Lockport Railroad company, as the same was then used and occupied by the company. The plaintiff claims, in this action, to recover damages for the flooding of his land since October 11, 1855; and proved, at the trial, that, by the construction and maintenance of the defendant's railroad, large quantities of water, in time of flood, were brought down the railroad ditches, from land lying northerlv from the *473 plaintiff's land, which, before the construction of the road, found an outlet into a creek in another direction, without passing over the said land, and that several times in each year, by reason of the insufficiency of the ditches along the northwesterly side of the railroad, when there were heavy rains and floods, the water accumulated along the side of the railroad and extended over the land, causing the injuries for which he claims redress in this action.
On the 11th of October, 1855, the plaintiff brought an action against the defendant in this action, to recover damages for injury to the same land and crops from the same cause, and he recovered final judgment in said action. The referee has found that the flooding of the plaintiff's land, since the 11th of October, 1855, was caused in the same manner as previous to that time, upon which the former judgment was rendered, and that the same embankment and ditches remained in the same condition, from the 11th of October, 1855, to the time of the commencement of this action, in which they were during the time the injuries occurred for which the former action was brought; that the same quantity of plaintiff's land, and by the same cause, had been flooded since the commencement of the former action, as had been flooded prior thereto; that the land thus over-flowed had been rendered thereby less valuable, and that the crops had been more or less injured in each year by the same cause, since the commencement of the former action. The referee also found that the plaintiff had sustained injuries from these same causes, from the 11th of October, 1855, to the commencement of this action, to the amount of four hundred dollars.
As a matter of law, the referee found that the former recovery for injuries sustained by the plaintiff from the same cause establishes the right of the plaintiff to recover any damages subsequently sustained from the same cause; and that the defendant, by keeping up and maintaining the embankment and ditches, and thereby diverting the water to the plaintiff's land, is liable to the plaintiff for these damages. *474
It seems to be conceded in the argument before the General Term, that the only question deserving of serious consideration in this case, is that relating to the effect of the recovery in a former action. The plaintiff's counsel contended that the former judgment was conclusive as to the liability of the defendant for the cause of the injury. The same embankment and the same ditches which, by the former judgment, it was adjudged, caused similar injuries to the plaintiff, caused injuries subsequently to him, and that judgment concluded the defendant from denying such liability in this action. This proposition, I think, can scarcely be now disputed. The case of Mersereau v. Pearsall (
The counsel for the defendant refers to a case in 24 N.Y. for the purpose of maintaining that the former recovery is a bar to all future actions for injuries caused by the same embankment and ditches; alleging that, according to the opinion delivered in that case, the plaintiff could have recovered prospective damages; and, consequently, the defendants could not be vexed in a second action. If, indeed, he could have recovered damages, not only for all injuries, which had occurred previous to the commencement of the action, but also for all injuries which may possibly *475
thereafter accrue, the first recovery would be a bar to the second. There are cases, undoubtedly, in which the plaintiff is at liberty to prove these direct and immediate consequences of the act complained of, occurring after the commencement of the action, which are so closely connected with the wrong that they would not, of themselves, furnish a distinct cause of action. In the old case, where the plaintiff declared in battery that he had previously commenced an action for it against the defendant, and recovered eleven pounds, and no more, and that afterward part of his skull, by reason of the battery, came out of his head, and for this subsequent damage the action was brought, the defendant pleaded the former recovery in bar, and on demurrer the plea was sustained. (Fetter v. Beal, 1 Lord Raymond, 339; S.C., 1 Salk. 11.) In Caldwell v. Murphy (1 Duer, 233, affirmed
I am in favor of affirming the judgment, with costs.
All the judges concurring, except BACON, J., who takes no part,
Judgment affirmed. *477