Porter v. Witham

17 Me. 292 | Me. | 1840

The opinion of the Court, was prepared by

Shepley J.

It appears from the bill, answer and proof, that there is a place in the Sandy River, in the town of Strong, called the rocky reach, where there may be a mill site, but the fall of the water is not sufficient to allow of more than one. It is gradual, and extends some distance in the river over the lands owned by both these parties. No mill or dam was in existence there in the spring of the year 1838. Early in that season, the defendants appear to have contemplated building one, and on the 28th of June they commenced digging in the bank, and soon laid the foundation of a dam, which they have since completed ; and they now use the water power to propel a grain-mill, which has also been erected there. The plaintiffs, owning land on one bank of the river, *294only, above them, appear to have contemplated building mills in Avon, until about the time when they purchased a tract of land, .which had been previously -bargained to the defendants, on the other bank' of the river; and then to'.have altered their minds and determined to build a dam about-one hundred rqds above the dam of the-defendants.' They soon after commenced and have built a dam there, which is flowed and rendered useless by that of the defendants. The plaintiffs allege, that the defendants did not first commence, and if they did, that they did not thereby acquire either at common law, or by- the statute respecting mills, a right to flow their dam and injure them. The defendants claim to be the first occupants, and contend,' that, they thereby acquired both at common law and by the statute- a right to flow, subject only to the payment of such damages, if any, as they may have occasioned.

The bill-asks for an injunction against such flowing by the dedefendants, and .that their dam may be abated as a nuisance. If the plaintiffs are not entitled to the exercise of this extraordinary chancery power of the Court, upon their own exhibit of their case? it will not' be necessary to decide any other questions.

■ The Court will interfere by injunction, where the party has long .and.without interruption enjoyed a right, which has been recently injured, or which is in danger of being injured or. destroyed; and when if it has riot been established by long Usage,- it has been by a judicial decision. But it is not ordinarily t.o determine the right in the first instance, that chancery hears the case, and then, if found to he established, exercises its extraordinary power to protect it. ’ Where the thing- already exists, it should be decided in a trial at law to be a nuisance before -.chancery interferes to abate it. Where it is about to be brought into existence, the Court in a proper case may interpose to prevent it. There can be no doubt, that it would.be unjust to-destroy property-or- the use of it before it has been determined by a judicial decision pr by lapse of time, that the owner can have no spch right as he claims and enjoys.- Nor is it- proper, that such decision should he made in chancery, for it may be, that in a trial at law to establish the right, the party injured will recover an entire satisfaction, and obtain a full compensation in damages, without calling for the redress of his grievances *295by a destruction of the property, or by an imprisonment of the person of his opponent.

In the case of the Attorney General v. Nichols, 16 Ves. 342, the Lord Chancellor says, cases may exist upon which this Court could not interfere, yet an action upon the case might be well maintained.” And in Gardner v. Village of Newburgh, 2 Johns. Ch. R. 164, it is said, “ the interference rests on the principles of a clear and certain right of enjoyment of the subject in question, and an injurious interruption of that right.” And in the case of the Attorney General v. Utica Ins. Co. ib. 379, that “ the English Court of Chancery rarely uses this process, except where the right is first established at law, or the exigency of the case renders it indispensable.” In Van Bergen v. Van Bergen, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 287, the Chancellor says, the cases in which chancery has interfered by injunction to prevent or remove a private nuisance, are those in which the nuisance has been erected to the prejudice or annoyance of a right, which the other party had long previously enjoyed. It must be a strong and mischievous case of pressing necessity, or the right must have been previously established at law to call to his aid the jurisdiction of this Court.” In Reid v. Gifford, 6 Johns. Ch. R. 19, where the plaintiff had been in possession of thills twenty years, and the defendant for more than three years before the filing of the bill had diverted the water, an injunction was denied on the ground, that the rights ought to be first settled at law. In the case of Bemis v. Upham, 13 Pick. 169, the bill alleged, that the dam had been determined by a judgment at law to be a nuisance.

In this case the plaintiffs have neither established their rights at law, nor secured them by long and uninterrupted enjoyment. It does not appear that they may not, if they have merits, obtain a full recompense in a single suit for all their injuries. And in such a case, the Court is neither called upon, nor permitted to grant an injunction, or process of abatement.

Bill dismissed, with costs for defendants.