7 Mo. 307 | Mo. | 1842
Opinion of the Court, delivered by
Martin, the complainant below, filed in March, 1839, his bill against the defendants below, Welton & Edwards, in which he stated, that he is the owner of a tract of land, through which Fishing river runs: that he, at the March term of the Clay circuit court, in 1838, filed his petition for leave to erect a dam on the said stream, to be connected with a grist and saw mill: afterwards, at the July term of the said court, permission was granted to erect his dam: that so soon as permission was obtained, he commenced building his dam, saw, and grist mill: that his dam and
The defendants, in their answer, admit that the complainant is owner of the tract of land mentioned in his bill, and did erect, at the time stated, the dam and mills therein described, by the permission of the circuit court of Clay county.— They admit they have built the dam complained of, about a mile and a half below the complainant’s: but deny that it causes the water to flow back so as materially to injure the complainant’s mill, and allege that it can now do as much work as if the defendants had not erected their dam: they deny that their dam was built without authority of law: that, at the Nov. Term, in 1837, of the Clay circuit court, a petition was filed,- praying for leave to erect the same, which was granted at the July term following, and in pursuance thereof, their dam was built: that at the time of filing their said petition, they believed the complainant was not owner of the land, at the point where he erected his dam, hut afterwards purchased the same, maliciously designing to deprive them of their mill seat. They admit, that when the mill stream is full, their dam causes the water to back to the complainant’s mill, but deny that it does any injury, &c. To this answer, there was a replication, and the cause set for hearing: at the return term of the writ, a motion was made for an injunction, the motion was continued, and it does not appear from the record that it was ever
The counsel for the defendants contended that, by the statute concerning mills, all unauthorized obstructions to water courses, were declared public nuisances, and on the authority of the opinion of Chancellor Kent, in the case of the Attorney General v. The Utica Insurance Company, 2, J. C. R. insist, that as the injury complained of, is a public nuisance, a court of equity has no jurisdiction. It is a plain principle, that the proprietor of land is entitled to the use of a water course which flows through it, and the law gives a remedy for the violation of the right. To , , , or obstruct a water course, is, by the common law, a private nuisance, 2, J. C. R. 164, Gardner v. Newburgh, and
The jurisdiction of courts of equity, in-cases of npisance, though not often exercised, is undoubted. It isffounded .... . . ... in the right to restrain the exercise, or the erection ot that, which irreparable damage to individuals, or great pub-]qc injury would ensue. Every diminution in value, however, of the premises, is not a ground for the court to inter-fere> nor every species of mischief upon which an action on the case might be maintained. Chancellor Kent says, “the m which chancery has interfered by injunction, to pre- or remove a private nuisance, are those in which
There is a view of this matter, derived from the course of the court below, which, in our judgment, is decisive against the complainant: a court of equity only interposes in these matters, when a suitable case is made out by the bill; if a case is clearly made out upon affidavit, it will grant or continue an injunction, until a trial can be had at law.
If the bill is filed merely for an injunction, and no prayer is made for an account, or compensation for damages, and ... . . , , , the injunction is not granted by the court to which the bill
. The counsel for the complainant, cited and relied upon fhe case of Gardner v. The Trustees of the village of Newbugh, 2, J. C. R. 162, as being in point. In that case the trustees of a village, proceeding under the authority of an act ^ iegiriature, by which they were empowered to the village with water, were about to divert an an-ciewi stream, which had immemorially flowed through a farm. the chancellor laying stress upon the fact, that the water had been immemorially enjoyed with the farm; and because the legislature had taken private property for public purposes, without providing a fair compensation, interfered by injunction to restrain the proceedings of the trustees, until a compensation was made for the persons who might be injured by diverting the water. In a subsequent case, Van Bergen v. Van Bergen, 3, J. C. R. 282, an application was made for an injunction, under circumstances similar to those stated in the bill now under consideration, the party complaining of the obstructions to his mill, caused by the erection of a dam on the same stream, below, which ■made the water flow back upon it; the chancellor, although ■of the opinion that the party had no just cause of complaint against the defendant, yet, after reviewing the authorities, held that the case was not such a one, as would warrant the exercise of the restraining powers of a court of equity, by injunction.
Decree reversed.