BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Johnstone v Scott [1835] CA 13_717 (7 November 1835) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1835/013SS0717.html Cite as: [1835] CA 13_717 |
[New search] [Help]
Page: 717↓
Subject_Property—Reparation—Summons.—
1. Title to a mill which held sufficient to support a claim for reparation on account of the destruction of the mill-lead, which passed through the property of another party. 2. Operations on the bank and bed of a stream having caused damage to an inferior proprietor, held to be wrongful. 3. Under a summons concluding for restoration of a mill-lead; or, on failure, for warrant to restore it at the expense of the defender, and also for damages, held competent to award as damages the expense of this operation.
The defender Scott was proprietor of certain lands on the Water of Gogo, in the county of Ayr, which he had acquired from the trustees of Sir Thomas Brisbane of Brisbane, in 1815. They were situated on both banks of the stream, but extended further down on the north, than on the south bank on which was situated, opposite Scott's lands, a haugh, held from the Brisbane trustees under long leases by two persons called Hyndman
After some discussion, mentioned ante, XII. 492 and 804, the following issue was sent to trial:—
“Whether the pursuers are proprietors of a mill or certain mills on the water of Gogo, in the county of Ayr; and whether, during the years 1816 and 1832, and intervening years, or any of them, the defender wrongfully performed certain operations, by erecting jettees, bulwarks, embankments, or other works, in the bed of the said river, and for the completion thereof, by bringing stones and materials from the bed and south bank of the said river, and elsewhere, to the loss, injury, and damage of the pursuers?
“Damages laid at £1000, as the amount sustained previous to the commencement of the action, and £500 yearly thereafter.”
In proof of their proprietorship of the mill, the pursuers put in a disposition by the Brisbane trustees, of date 1830, to the mill of Gogo, “together with the dam or inlair on the water of Gogo, and the water and water leads upwards,” &c., “in so far as the said mill has a right thereto by prescriptive use, or otherwise, and the whole other parts, privileges, and pertinents belonging to the said mill.” They also proved that the mill had been supplied by the lead in question for a period beyond memory. As to the other parts of the case, it was given in evidence, that the defender, Scott, had acquired his property in 1815, and had for some years thereafter carried on operations on the bank and in the stream, which consisted chiefly in making a considerable embankment on the north side of the river, to protect his lands against the stream, for which purpose he had taken from the bed of the stream and the south bank, a considerable quantity of stones, which were of a large size, and had also quarried materials from the channel itself, and that these operations had been completed before the pursuers purchased Gogo Mill in 1830. It was further proven, that the carrying away of the mill-lead bad been effected by an unusually violent flood; but it was given in evidence by engineers, that the effect of the defender's embankment and other operations was to throw the water with much more violence than formerly against the south bank, and that they were the cause of the injury suffered.
No proof was led as to any loss sustained by reason of the alleged stoppage of the mill; but estimates were deponed to of the expense which would be required to restore the lead to an equally efficient condition as before.
For the defender it was pleaded, in addition to the argument on the proof as to the embankment, &c., being the cause of the injury, 1st, That the pursuers had not instructed any title to the mill-lead, there being no reservation thereof shown to exist in the leases to Hyndman and Jameson, through whose ground it passed. 2. That they, not being conterminous
The Lord Justice-Clerk charged the jury, That the title was sufficiently proved to satisfy the issue, and to entitle the pursuers to recover, if damage had been done by the defender's operations:—that if injury had been so caused by the operations, they must be held to have been wrongful, and that under the summons the jury might competently, in assessing the damages, take into view the expense of restoring the lead to its former condition.
The defender excepted to this direction, in so far as his Lordship instructed the jury that a sufficient title had been proved, and that they might competently award as damages the expense of restoring the lead.
Verdict for the pursuers—Damages £1800.
Solicitors: W. Patrick, W.S.— Hill and Thomson, W.S.—Agents.