100 N.E. 434 | NY | 1912
The plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land in the county of Otsego, on Unadilla river, in this state, which at this point divides the counties of Otsego and Chenango. The defendant erected and has maintained a dam across the river by which the plaintiff's lands had been flooded. This action was brought to compel the defendant to lower the height of the dam and refrain from flooding the plaintiff's lands. The trial court found that the plaintiff had owned and been in possession of the lands described in the complaint ever since the year 1900; that in 1901 a dam which had been maintained on the river for a great number of years was carried away and a new dam built by the defendant in the place thereof, which is twenty-six inches higher than the old dam, by which the water overflows two parcels of the plaintiff's farm one of 40 acres and the other 2 12/100 acres. An injunction was awarded with respect to the 2 12/100 acre piece, but denied as to the 40-acre piece. From so much of the judgment as denied the injunction with respect to the 40-acre tract the plaintiff appealed. The judgment was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division and from that affirmance an appeal has been taken to this court.
The determination of the controversy depends on the rights of the parties under certain conveyances. It is unnecessary to go back of the title of one Daniel Ross, who owned the mill and tracts on each side of the river, which included the 40-acre parcel. He died intestate in *37
1864. In 1865 his infant children and heirs at law, by their special guardian, conveyed the property to one William N. Clinton by two deeds, one embracing the land in Otsego county, including the 40 acres already mentioned, and the other embracing the land on the Chenango side, including the mill. On these conveyances Clinton executed two mortgages to secure part of the purchase money. The deed of the Otsego county property does not appear in the record and the mortgage does not describe the lands as subject to any easements or rights whatever. The deed of the Chenango property contains a description by metes and bounds and concludes: "It being the factory lands and premises connected therewith in the Town of New Berlin belonging to Daniel Ross at the time of his death." The deeds and mortgages of the two pieces of property seem to have been given at the same time. Default having been made in the payment of the Otsego county mortgage it was foreclosed by advertisement and the property sold on July 16th, 1870. The notice of sale contained this provision: "The said lands and premises will be sold subject to the right to flow the same by keeping the dam to the Ross Factory pond to the same height that said Daniel Ross, deceased, kept the same or had the right to keep the same in his lifetime, and said right to flow is hereby to be reserved to any and all persons who may own the said water privilege." The affidavits filed state that "said sale was so made excepting and reserving the right to any and all persons who may at any time hereafter own the water privilege heretofore connected with the Ross factory in New Berlin Village to flow said premises to the same extent that Daniel Ross had the right to flow the same, when living, and to flow the same and keep the dam to the height mentioned and stated in said printed notice, and reserving all rights mentioned in said printed notice, and as there stated." But the record does not show that any particular height of the dam was stated in the notice of sale or otherwise. *38
The title to the mill property subsequently, through several mesne conveyances, vested in the defendant. The foundation of its title is a mortgage for the sum of $5,000 executed by said Clinton to one Burditt on February 4th, 1870. This mortgage was foreclosed by advertisment and the mortgaged premises sold on October 6th, 1870. It covered thirty-six acres of land situated in Chenango county describing the same with appurtenances and reciting, "it being the factory and lands and premises connected therewith in the town of New Berlin, and belonging to said Daniel Ross at the time of his death." When Clinton mortgaged the factory property to Burditt there was a severance of the two properties, and, doubtless, there was subjected to the lien of the mortgage and passed under the foreclosure thereof all the mill privileges and water rights that were appurtenant to the factory in the then existing condition of the property. The rule is well established that when the owner of a whole tenement divides the same and conveys or mortgages a portion, the parties are presumed to contract with reference to the condition of the property at the time, and that neither has the right by alteration to change materially the value of the respective parts. (Lampman v. Milks,
We do not concur with the courts below in the interpretation of the reservation. The rule is that a reservation or exception must be construed strictly against the grantor in favor of the grantee. The only value of the land was for agricultural purposes. The right of flowage contended for by the defendant would seem to make the land practically worthless, yet it brought $2,340 on the foreclosure sale, which it is hardly possible would have been paid for it had the parties interpreted the reservation as broadly as is now claimed. We will not pursue the discussion further since it is doubtful whether the question is sufficiently raised in the record before us, and under familiar rules of law the reservation is of no avail to the defendant for other reasons.
It is elementary law, stated in every text book on the subject, that a reservation or exception in favor of a stranger to a conveyance is void or inoperative. (Washburn on Real Property, § 2354; Devlin on Deeds, § 979; Pearson v. Hartman, 100 Penn. St. 84; Wadsworth v. Smith,
It is urged that the grantee under a deed containing a reservation or exception is estopped from denying the efficacy of such exception or reservation. If that were the law there would be nothing left of the doctrine that a reservation to a stranger is inoperative and that a stranger takes nothing under it. Moreover, in this case the defendant has no equity on which to found the claim of an estoppel. If the law gave validity and efficacy to an exception in favor of a stranger it would not help the defendant's position. Such exception in favor of a stranger could be made only by the owner of the property. Here the exception was made by the mortgagee who under our law has no estate in the mortgaged property, but merely a lien thereon. He could sell the property but for one purpose, to realize the mortgage debt, and but in one manner, that prescribed by the statute. He was not obliged to sell all the property, but what was not sold remained the property of the mortgagor, and the mortgagee could no more give it away to third parties than *42 could any stranger. Neither the defendant nor its predecessors in title paid anything for the right it asserts, and that right was received from a person who had no power, real or apparent, to grant it.
The case of Sherman v. Willett (
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK, CHASE and COLLIN, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.