58 So. 462 | Ala. | 1912
The learned judge of the city court thus concisely states the case now presented for review on appeal: “Tn this cause, the state seeks to enjoin the Alabama Power Company, a corporation, from constructing and maintaining a dam across the Coosa river at a point in Chilton county, Ala., described in the bill, insisting that the Coosa river is a navigable stream; that the state is the owner of and the title is in it to the bed and waters of said river; that the said Alabama Power Company has no right or authority from the complainant to construct said dam and maintain the same; that in the construction of said dam the said Alabama Power Company is committing a recurring and continuous trespass on the property and rights of complainant, and said dam will and does constitute a public nuisance. The defendant’s answer sets forth how the proposed dam is to be built; that they are the owners of and have acquired by purchase, and not by condemnation, a dam site, or power site, comprising more than one acre of ground upon each and opposite sides of said river, it being acquired by purchase and not by condemnation, the lands described in complain
The substantial parts of the agreement of the respective solicitors are as folloAvs:
“(1) That all the averments of fact.contained in the bill of complaint are true and admitted, but the folloAVing averments of legal conclusions are not admitted by respondent as being correct conclusions of laAV: (a) In the third paragraph of the bill: 'That respondent has not the right or authority from complainant to construct said dam and maintain the same, and that, in the construction of said dam respondent is committing a recurring and continuing trespass on the property and rights of complainant, and said dam avíII and does constitute a public nuisance.’ (b) In the fourth paragraph of the bill: 'That said dam Avhen completed, and at the various stages of completion, avíII and does constitute a public nuisance.’
“(2) That all the averments of fact contained in the ansAver are true and admitted, but the folloAving conclusions of laAV contained in the answer are not admitted to be correct conclusions of law: (a) In the third paragraph of the answer, the conclusion of law that the facts therein set up give to respondent the right to construct said dam across said navigable river.”
In Alabama the legal title to the beds and Avaters of navigable ways is lodged in the state in trust for public purposes; subordinate, hoAvever, to the supreme right of navigation AA’hich is lodged in the United States as trus
The single question which the state (appellant) presents on this appeal is whether Code, § 3627 et seq., intends the granting, by the state, of the right, to corporations lawfully chartered to manufacture, supply, and sell to the public power produced by water as a motive force, to dam navigable waters?
The state insists that the only statutory authorization, to that end, existing with respect to navigable water, is to be found in Code, §§ 6148, 6149. It may be here remarked that these last-mentioned statutes have no reference to corporations other than those organized for the “purpose of improving navigation upon navigable rivers” in this state in connection therewith of the
The burden of the argument for the state is that the rights given by Code, § 3627 et seq., are confined to non-navigable waters, alone; and, in consequence, that the obstruction, as shown by the appellee, is unauthorized, and therefore a public nuisance. It is clear, of course, that if the statutes last mentioned do confer the rights claimed by the Power Company — the United States having given it sanction and approval in the premises — no nuisance is, or will be, thereby created.
Code, § 3627 et seq., is a codification of the act approved March 12, 1907 (General Acts 1907, pp. 430-442). Under the act of 1903, ante, it appears that, except in the instance the owner of one bank of a navigable stream has the authority from the United States to dam such stream, the rights intended to be conferred thereby were restricted to nonnavigable streams. By the act of 1907, ante, there was amendment of the act of 1903, one effect of which was to eliminate from the first section of the act of 1903 the terms whereby the stated restriction to nonnavigable streams was interposed. The Code Committee (raised by the joint action of the Houses to consider and revise the Avork of the Code Commission) Avrote Code, § 3627 et seq., which when adopted Avith the Code of 1907, on July 27, 1907, became the last expressions of the lawmakers on the phase of the subject Avhicli now concerns us. So far as Ave regard it as presently important, section 3627 reads: “All corporations organized under the general laws of this state or heretofore under a special act of the Legislature, and all corporations organized under the laws of
It is seen that the premises feature of the statute (section 3627) contemplates, Avithout restriction to either navigable or nonnavigable streams, the acquirement, otherAvise than by condemnation, by the corporation of a dam or poAver site on both and opposite sides of the Avater course. Then, in enumerating the “rights, powers and authority” conferred, it is provided, without limitation, that the corporation conforming to the condi
Beading the section (3627) in the light of its legislative parentage (the Acts of 1903 and 1907), and minding the phrasing as well as the structure of the paragraph enumerating the powers of the corporations thereinabove described, we do not think the view of the state’s representatives is at all tenable. The basis for the limitation made by the parenthetical expression is to be found, undoubtedly, in the succeeding provisions where
Certainly, if the lawmakers had intended to confine the grant of the rights defined in section 3627 to non-navigable streams, they would not have committed so important a limitation to expression in an interposed, in mid-section, parenthetical phrase, especially when preceding the conjunction an unrestricted grant of the rights, etc., therein enumerated is made with respect to all Avater courses in this state, whether navigable or nonnavigable. The interposition of the stated parenthetical expression at the point it was interposed leaves no room for doubt that its intended purpose and effect was not to limit or restrict the rights and powers thereinbefore granted, Avhich as we have stated comprehend the navigable streams of the state.
Having such statutory warrant,' from the state, to construct and operate a dam or power site, subject to the conditions therein defined, and which, it appears,
The decree to this end is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.