
    Abraham D. Covert, Respondent, v. The City of Brooklyn, Appellant.
    
      •Continuing trespass—successive actions may be maintained—authority to build an . , ' aqueduct does not authorize a trespass.
    
    A judgment for damages for the diversion of water running in a watercourse, ■ and used for supplying the plaintiff’s mill with motive power, is not a har to a second action brought to recover damages, accrued since the- commencement of the first action, by reason of the. continuance of the act of diversion of water ■ ' which gave rise to the first suit!
    In such a case the plaintiff may have his entire damages assessed in one action-brought for that purpose, but he is not limited to that remedy.
    The fact that a city has legal authority to erect an' aqueduct does hot entitle it to trespass upon the rights of an individual. ■
    Appeal by the defendant, The City of Brooklyn, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the •office of the clerk of the county of Queens on the 30th day of June, 1896, upon the. verdict of a jury rendered-after a trial at a Trial Term of the Supreme Court held in and for the county of- Queens, ■and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 23d day of June; 1896, denying-the'defendant’s motion fora new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      
      William G. Cooke, for the appellant.
    
      A. N. Weller and George W. Davison, for the respondent.
   Per Curiam:

The action is brought to recover damages for the diversion of water running in a watercourse and used for supplying plaintiff’s mill with motive power. The principal questions which control this case were disposed of by us on a former appeal in. another action between the same parties. (Covert v. City of Brooklyn, 6 App. Div. 73.) The present case raises no other question than that the former recovery of damages constitutes a bar to the maintenance of the present action'. Our former decision also settled this question by implication, as it expressly limited the recovery therein to damages sustained from the date of the injury to the time of the commencement of the action. (Id. 75.) The effect of defendant’s acts in and .about the erection of its structure was to divert the water and prevent plaintiff from enjoying what he had before possessed. This result constituted a trespass upon plaintiff’s •rights and was as to him illegal. The fact that defendant had authority of law for the erection of the aqueduct did not vest it with authority to trespass upon plaintiff’s rights. This is not a case of consequential damages which flows fronj the- exercise, of a legal right in a proper manner and for which no recovery whatever is authorized, as was the case in Radcliff’s Executors v. The Mayor (4 N. Y. 195); Bellinger v. N. Y. C. R. R. (23 id. 47) and other kindred cases. It is a wrongful interference with plaintiff’s property right, and whether it be called technically a nuisance or an illegal act is of no consequence, as the result is the same. To the extent that injury is inflicted, plaintiff has his remedy by action for damages. .There has never been any presumption that. a party will make permanent the instrument that inflicts the wrong, or that he will continue to act illegally in any respect, either- by personal acts or permanent erections. These principles have been elaborately discussed in Uline v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (101 N. Y. 98), and ics authority remains unchallenged, as is evidenced by the numerous cases that have followed it. There is no distinction in principle between that ■ case and the present. Its authority establishes the right of plaintiff to maintain this action, and successive actions, if defendant does not. desist from its illegal act. Plaintiff may undoubtedly have his entire damage assessed in one action brought for that purpose. (Carll v. Village of Northport, 11 App. Div. 120.) But he is not limited to that remedy, and may pursue the remedy he has here adopted. If defendant by- its structure now finds that it has permanently interfered' with plaintiff’s rights, and that its structure necessarily requires plaintiff’s property right in this respect, it has means to determine, once and for all, how much it should pay by invoking the authority vested in it by statute. Until such time, if it chooses to continue the illegal act, it does so at the peril of responding in damages. As the former recovery was no bar to the present action, the judgment appealed from should be affirmed,, with costs. .

All concurred.

Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.  