By the Oourt,
James, J.Upon the facts found, in this case, the plaintiff insisted that he was entitled to recover as upon an implied promise, for the damages sustained by him in consequence of the logs remaining upon his land, and so the court below held. It is certain that a promise could not be implied to pay, nor a recovery had, for the damages occasioned to the plaintiff’s land by the mere lodgment of the logs on his premises; in fact, an express promise to pay for such damages would have no consideration to uphold it.
It may be said that these logs were neither purposely or wrongfully on the plaintiff’s land. They did not come there through the willful negligence of the defendantstheir being there was simply the result of accident.
Great floods are designated in the books as fortuitous; *370neither to be foreseen or prevented by the providence of man. Being fortuitous, they cast no blame or liability on man.
When an accident occurs entirely from superior agency, and without fault on the part of the party sought to be charged, or blame imputable to him, an action for an injury ' resulting from such accident cannot be maintained. If the house of A. accidentally take fire and the adjoining house of B., in consequence, be consumed, no action arises to B. against A. for the loss. So if a tree which is blown down fall into the ground, or upon the house of a neighbor, the owner of the tree is not responsible for the injury. Had these logs been driven by the flood ag&inst a warehouse or other building situate on the river bank, and demolished it, the owner could not have maintained an action for the loss. So in this case, an action cannot be sustained for the bare lodgment of the logs by the flood upon the plaintiff’s land. It was contended on the argument, that the defendants were liable by reason of having placed their logs in the river; but that is not so. The Hudson river is a public way for floating logs and rafts; and the defendants had the right to its use for that purpose, being responsible only for damages occasioned by direct illegal acts, or resulting from negligence. A traveler in the highway is not responsible for damages occasioned by his horses taking fright and running away without his fault; yet it might be said the injury would not have happened had the traveler remained at home.
When an injury is occasioned by the direct act of a party, he is liable; as when he cuts trees and they fall on to another’s land, (Hay v. The Cohoes Co. 2 Comst. 159;) but when the injury is the result of accident, the injured party is without redress. In this case the logs were not placed upon the plaintiff’s land by any direct act of the defendants, nor by reason of their negligence or fault, and therefore no promise can be implied to pay the damages occasioned by their lodgment simply. But these logs, after remaining upon the plaintiff’s land for nine months, were reclaimed and removed *371"by tfie defendants, and the recovery below was for the injury sustained in consequence of the logs so remaining.
Suffering the logs so to remain would not alone give a right of action, because the owners might, if they chose, abandon them, in which the logs would become derelict, and, like treasure trove, belong to him who first reduced them to possession. If a flood should sweep down the forest of A. on to the land of B. the former could not be compelled to remove it; nor could B. maintain an action against A. for damages, if A. saw fit to abandon all claim to the timber. But the owner of property thus carried on to the land of another, or lost, is not thereby deprived of his right to it; he may abandon it, or he may reclaim it; if not abandoned, he may have an action for its possession, or value, against any one who detains or converts it. (Nicholson v. Chapman, 2 H. Blackstone, 254.) It was said ‘in Isaac v. Clark, (2 Bulst. 512,) that “ where a man doth find goods he is bound to answer him that hath the propertyand this has always been the rule as well in regard to property which comes to the possession of another by accident as by finding \ and an entry upon another’s land to retake one’s own property which has come there by accident, as if fruit fall into another’s ground, or a tree be blown down upon another’s land, maybe justified. (Anthony v. Harvey, 8 Bing. 191. Story on Bailment, sec. 83 a.) If a party seek to reclaim prop-r erty lost or accidentally on the premises of another, before any damage, labor or expense has arisen or been incurred respecting it, the finder or the person in whose possession it be has no claim upon him for recompense; but if he do not; if, after delay, he reclaim the property, he will be liable for all damages arising from the delay, and for necessary labor and expense incurred respecting it; although no lien attaches for such claim. (Nicholson v. Chapman, supra.) In such case the law will imply a promise to pay for such damages, or for such labor and expense.
*372It was urged that the claim here was for a gratuitous service, and that a promise could not he implied in such case. It is certain that a promise cannot he implied for a mere gratuitous service, where such service is vóluntary; such as saving property from fire, or from water; securing boats astray; unsolicited supplies of food, or unsolicited service. (Binstead v. Buck, 2 W. Black. 1117. 2 Strange, 278. 1 Esp. 86. 1 M. & S. 290.) But- suffering these logs to remain on the plaintiff’s meadow was not, in any sense, a voluntary or gratuitous service. Had the claim been for catching the logs when afloat, or removing them to a place of safety after their lodgment, or returning them to the river, it would have been a voluntary and gratuitous act; but suffering them to remain where they were carried by the water, was a forced use of the plaintiff’s land, short of a trespass, and beneficial to the defendants, by having them stored convenient to the river for removal at the proper season, by not being required to incur expense in their removal at an inconvenient season, or forced into an abandonment or sale, as they might have been, by proceedings under 1 R. S. 698, or distress damage "feasant. (Woodfall's Landlord and Tenant, 627. 2 R. S. 618.) Suppose it had been the defendants’ horses instead of their logs which had been thrown upon the plaintiff’s meadow, and they had been suffered to remain there with the defendants’ knowledge for nine months, and then they had been reclaimed, can there be a doubt that-a request to keep and a promise to pay for their keeping would be implied ?
• A promise will always be implied whenever natural justice requires it in consideration of some benefit conferred. (5 Greenl. 519.) It was intimated in Amory v. Flyn, (10 John. 102,) that a finder of the property was entitled to be reimbursed the necessary expenses of keeping it; and it was held in Reder v. Anderson, (4 Dana, 193,) that the finder was entitled, under an implied assumpsit, to an indemnity *373at least against his expenditures of time and money, in the recovery of lost property. (Story on Bailment, 121 a, 621 a.)
The rule of the civil law, upon this subject, is thus stated in Domat, (vol. 1, pp. 629, 630, part 1, b. 2, tit. 9, seo. 2, arts. 3, 4, 5:) “ The proprietor of ground on which is thrown the rubbish of a building that is fallen down, or that which a flood has carried away from another’s ground, is obliged to suffer him who has had the loss to take away what remains, and to allow him such free access to his grounds as is necessary for that end; but he who desires to have back the materials of his building that is fallen down, or that which a flood has carried away from his land and thrown upon another man’s ground, is obliged on his part not only to indemnify the proprietor of the said ground as to what damage shall happen to be done by his taking away the things which 'have been thrown upon it, but he is bound to repair all the damage which has been already done to the ground by the things since they were cast upon it. But if he chooses rather not to take away any thing, he will owe nothing; for if he abandons to the proprietor of that ground all that has been cast upon it, he is not bound to make good a damage that has happened by the bare effect of that accident; it is enough that he loses what the accident has carried away from him.” The same rule is also laid down as the law, in Hammond’s Nisi Brins, 168, § 3.
The plaintiff's case is precisely within the foregoing rule of the civil law and the principle of the common law as recognized in Nicholson v. Carpenter, (2 H. Blk. 254;) Amory v. Flyn, (10 John. 102;) and Henly v. Walsh, (2 Salk. 686.)
Common justice also requires, that where one has incurred necessary expense, or suffered damage, in securing, or caring for, or storing, the property of another which is lost, afloat or astray, and it is afterwards reclaimed, the owner should repay such expense, or pay such damage, and if refused, *374that an action should be allowed, to recover therefor; that in such case the law should imply a request, and a promise from the owner.
[Schenectady Generad Term, May 3, 1864.I think the judgment below was right and should be affirmed.
Judgment accordingly.
Potter, Pockes, James and Posekrans, Justices.]