Case ID: ad_42/html/0328-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "LANDON, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Mary L. Beekman and Samuel Beekman, Appellants, v. Fred Jones, Respondent.
    
      Brie canal — a person laying a pipe across the towpath to his own land — he has no right of action against one who plugs the pipe at the canal.
    
    A person who, without authority, lays a pipe from his lands across. the towpath of the Brie canal to the canal itself, using the water thus obtained for irrigating purposes, cannot recover damages from a person who maliciously places a plug in the pipe where it opens into the canal.
    Appeal by the plaintiffs, Mary L. Beekman and another, from an order of' the County Court of Montgomery county, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Montgomery on the 11th day of April, 1898, granting the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 10th day of June, 1898, amending said order.
    
      H. V. Borst, for the appellants..
    
      H. M. Eldredge, for the respondent.
   LANDON, J.:

The plaintiffs dug a ditch across the towpath of the Erie canal, and thence down the embankment to tlieir own lands adjacent to the canal, and laid a two-inch pipe therein from the water in the canal for about sixteen feet, or partly .across the towpath,. and then connected a one-inch pipe thereto, and laid the latter in the ditch to and upon their own lands in such Way as to cause the waters of the canal to flow through the pipe. The plaintiffs used the water thus obtained for irrigating their lands, and thereby increased their productiveness. The defendant stealthily put a bass-wood plug into the mouth of the pipe in the canal j it passed on to the connection between the two-inch and one-inch pipe, .swelled and stopped further flow of the water. The plaintiffs tried in various ways to clear out the pipe, but without any substantial success until they obtained a hint about the plug, and then, digging' at the connection 'of the pipes, found and removed it.. They then sued the defendant in the Justice’s Oourt and recovered $200 damages and costs. The defendant appealed to the County Court, and upon the trial there before a j ury recovered $100 damages. The County Court, upon the defendant’s motion, set the verdict aside upon exceptions taken by the defendant.

The Erie canal is the property of the State. The plaintiffs show no right to the use of its waters, The statute provides that the Canal Board, and also the Superintendent of Public Works, may, in certain specified cases and upon the observance of the conditions prescribed, grant permission for the use of the surplus waters of the canals. (Canal Law, chap. 338, Laws of 1894, §§ 11, 90-99.) These conditions have, among other objects, special regard for safeguarding the canals and their navigation. Without setting them forth at length, it will suffice to say that they confer no authority to permit the tapping of the canal in the manner here employed. No officer is authorized to bestow privileges in the public property as.if they .were of his private estate, and it is not claimed that any officer assumed to bestow them. We cannot, therefore, presume that the plaintiffs were rightfully using the water. They had no right to the use of the water from the canal, and, therefore, no right which the court can assist, or which the defendant did invade. Suppose A. has a cow which B. daily surreptitiously milks, and C. maliciously kills the cow. No one would claim that B. has a cause of action against C. for depriving him of the supply of milk he was enjoying. The court does not lend its aid to a party who founds his cause of action upon bis own illegal act.

It is urged that the plaintiffs were in possession of the pipe, and, therefore, had sufficient title against a wrongdoer. The plaintiffs had no possession of the canal bank, and, therefore, none of the place where the defendant plugged the pipe. The defendant committed no trespass upon the plaintiffs’ property. His act was upon the. land of the State. The injury to the plaintiffs, if any, is not direct, but consequential. The plaintiffs cannot complain of the act, as they might have done if it had been performed on their land, but of its consequences. The consequences affected no right of the plaintiffs. If the State had closed the pipe, the plaintiffs could not complain. Assuming that the defendant had no authority from the State, the State was, nevertheless, by the defendant’s act restored to its rights, and for that the plaintiffs can have no cause of action against the defendant, the defendant not having invaded their property. The plaintiffs do not fail because the defendant has made a good, defense, hut because they have pot established any case. If A: is-in wrongful possession of B.’s horse, and C. takes the horse from A. without the latter’s consent, A. may recover from C. because C. is a mere intermeddler without a shadow of right; but if C. immediately restores the horse to B. before suit, and B. adopts C.’s act, thén C. can make good his defense, because he was acting for the owner’s benefit, and the owner ratifies the act' The case supposed differs from the one in hand, because from its nature C. would be obliged texplain that he was acting for the owner. But here the plaintiffs cannot state their case without showing that the defendant’s act was for the benefit of the owner of the water and not for himself; that; the defendant did not take the water for himself, but simply stopped the owner’s further loss of it, and thus the plaintiffs can state no right in themselves.

. The order of the County Court should he affirmed, with costs.

All concurred, except Putnam, J., not sitting.

Order of the County Court affirmed, with costs.