15 Johns. 213 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1818
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question involved in the decision of this case may, perhaps, be considered as one of the first impression. I cannot persuade myself, however, that the claim set up by the plaintiff can be sustained upon any principles of lary recognized in our courts. The principle sought to be established is, that a previous occupancy of land upon a stream of water,
Although I differed from the opinion of the court in that case, it was upon the ground that the plaintiff had acquired a superior right by a prior enjoyment of the water, in a particular manner, for forty years, which was sufficient to raise the presumption of a grant; and the chief justice, who also dissented from the majority of the court, rejected the doctrine set up by the plaintiff in this case. Many cases, said he, may be supposed, which would be damnum absque injuria : such as the insensible evaporation and decrease of the water by dams, or the occasional increase or decrease of the velocity of the current, and the quantum of water below. Many such circumstances may be inevitable from the establishment of one dam above another upon the same stream. I have been thus particular in noticing the several opinions in this case, because, if the principles which seem there to be taken for granted by the whole court, are well founded, they are in direct hostility to the plaintiff’s right of action. There is no ground, in point of fact, if that could make any difference in the principle, for alleging that there was no natural mill seat or fall, where the defendants’ works are erected. There is enough for every purpose for which the defendants have, and bad, a
Judgment for the defendants.