2 Johns. 283 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1807
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, so far as she sustained any injury in consequence of the culpable neglect of the defendants, in not keeping the canal in repair, was entitled to recover damages. The law necessarily imposes on the company the duty of-keeping this canal in repair ; and in all such cases where an injury has been sustained, by the want of the due care and caution of another, such person must be responsible for the damage occasioned by his neglect and omission. (Espinasse's Digest, 598. 1 Strange, 334. 2 Lev. 72.) But no damages were recoverable for the supposed injury occasioned by the stopping up the cross ditches and drains. This must necessarily have been taken into consideration, in the appraisement of the damages and compensation to be made the plaintiff in tho first instance. The law required tho appraisers to -ascertain the value of the land, and the damages sustained by the owner, in consequence of the appropriation of it to the use of the company. The injury on this score was inseparable from the very act of making the canal, and not occasioned by any neglect of a duty enjoined by law. The company, in making this canal, acted under the authority of an act of the legislature, and no action will lie against them for any damages occasioned by cutting the canal, unless they exceeded their jurisdiction. (4 Term, 794, Governor & Co. of the cast plate manufacturers v. Meredith.) All evidence of damages on this account ought therefore, in my judgment, to have been excluded. Admitting the declaration to have been defective, yet, if the defendants did not think proper to demur, I see no reason
The relief which we can now afford the defendants appears to be attainable only by granting a new trial, on the ground that improper evidence was admitted. Iam inclined to think, however, that substantial justice does not require this. Most of the witnesses, on both sides, ascribed the principal part of the damages to the leaking of the water from the canal. It is, therefore, fairly to be presumed, that this was the chiefground of damage taken into consideration by the jury, and that the result would be nearly the same on a second trial. This motion mayj therefore, be denied, consistently with a fit and discreet exercise of the power of the court in granting new trials.
The court are therefore of opinion, that the motion for a new trial must be denied.
Judgment for the plaintiff.
Van Horne v. Petric & others.