13 Wend. 343 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1835
By the Court,
All the rights and privileges to the use of the basin, possessed by Charles Carroll, under the deed of partition bearing date the 19th September, 1822, and which he would have been entitled to enjoy in the occupation of mill site No. 7, for its benefit and convenience as such, he conveyed to Kempshall, by his deed of 21st May, 1823, in terms too special and explicit to be misunderstood. After describing the privileges granted and restrictions imposed, he adds: “ It being hereby intended to convey the said mill site number seven, with the same privileges and immunities, and subject to the same limitations and restrictions, and expenses-
There is nothing in the deed of partition expressly regulating or restricting the use of their common interest, and it is left, therefore, to the operation of law. Being tenants in common, they are possessed per my et per tout, and upon strict principles applicable to this estate, each is entitled to the use and enjoyment of every part of the basin—one part as-much as another. 2 Black. Comm. 194. Looking at the subject, however, with regard to the division of the mill lots, and that the basin was constructed in part, at least for the benefit and accommodation of those lots, this general right of each, legally flowing from the nature of the estate,- should be deem.ed'so far qualified by the deed of partition, by implication of law, as to admit the application of the maxim sic utere tuo, ut alienum non Icedas; and neither party ought to be permitted so to occupy the basin or use this common right in
It does not appear to be denied but that the original proprietors would have been entitled to the right now claimed by the plaintiffs as against each other; but it is supposed that the plaintiffs have not been invested with such right. The argument is, that the basin was a separate and distinct piece of property, held in common by them, except the east bank or wharf, which was divided and held in severalty for specified objects; that the plaintiffs by their deed only acquired a several portion of such wharf belonging to Carroll, without any interest or right in the basin, except to use it reasonably as a way of ingress, egress, and regress to and from such wharf. The soundness of the argument upon this view, must depend upon a construction of the deed to ICempshall of mill site No. 7. We have before expressed our opinion of the true construction of that deed, and will only add, that it in terms conveys to him u the same privilege of wharfage, of loading and unloading boats on said thirty-five feet, (the width of the lot) that the said Charles is entitled to by said deed, (meaning the partition deed;) the said ICempshall not to bear any part of the expense of making the basin, but to be at the same expense of keeping it in repair that the said Charles would have been liable to for said mill site.” It is true that the plaintiffs are only entitled to the use of the basin, as an easement in going to and from their mill lot, and for the purpose of loading and unloading their boats, but they are also entitled to the enjoyment of these privileges to the fullest extent, and in the most ample manner that belonged to their grantors. They have paid for these privileges, and are perpetually subject to the
It was said, on the argument, that as the original proprietors in their division of the mill sites possessed a width equal to the length of a canal boat, the inconvenience complained of could not have existed to them, and it was inferred that this view probably entered into their consideration in the division. The facts abundantly refute this argument—each mill site, according to the division, measuring but thirty-one feet, besides
It was also said that all the owners of lots adjoining the basin had the same rights which belonged to the plaintiffs, and that they did not pretend to make the claims which were made by the plaintiffs. Whether this be so or not, we cannot say ; and whether they have the same rights as the plaintiffs, must depend upon their deeds. We put the right of the plaintiffs upon express grant,vend any other person showing a similar conveyance, would of course be entitled to the same privilegés.
From the foregoing principles discussed and applied to the special verdict, and in pursuance of its directions, it necessarily follows that the plaintiffs are entitled to the judgment for $1, for obstructing the passage to and from their wharf; and also to judgment for the $100, for preventing them, by means of the same obstruction, from laying their boats in front of the defendant’s wharf, for the purpose of loading and unloading, when not in the use of himself or some other common otoner. The judgment of the $100 follows from the principle of law arising from the estate in common in the basin, and the qualification derived from the construction of the deed of partition, that each proprietor of the mill site must so use this common right as not substantially to injure his neighbor.' When the basin in front of the wharf of one of the parties is not in the appropriate use of the owners of the wharf, the right to occupy it is then free, and may be enjoyed by either of the other parties, in the same manner as he may use the basin in front of his own lot.
Judgment for plaintiffs.