70 W. Va. 264 | W. Va. | 1912
Arthur F. Bennett and Lloyd J. Booth filed their bill in the circuit court of Barbour county praying for a mandatory injunction to compel defendant to remove a mill dam, located on his own land across a stream of water flowing through plaintiffs’ land, causing the overflow of plaintiffs land above. The case was heard upon pleadings and proofs, on the 6th of October, 1909, and the temporary injunction, which had been previously awarded, was dissolved, and plaintiffs’ bill dismissed. They have appealed.
Defendant claims the right to flood plaintiffs’ land, as a right appurtenant to his own land. Frederick Booth, grandfather of defendant and one of the plaintiffs, was originally the owner of both tracts of land, and while such owner, he erected a grist mill and built a dam on a portion of the tract. Sometime thereafter, in the year 1887, he conveyed to his son, Jeremiah Booth, by deed with general warranty of title, 102 acres which is the land now owned by plaintiffs, and a portion of which is submerged by
One of the plaintiffs .'is a son, and the other a son-in-law,, of Jeremiah Booth, the former owner of the land burdened with the easement, if indeed it is so burdened, and notwithstanding the dam was out of repair and the mill not in use, at the time of their purchase, still they took the land subject to whatever burden, if any, existed upon it in the hands of Jeremiah Booth to whose title they succeeded. By their purchase they became his privies in estate. 24 Gyc. 62; Hurxthal v. Boom Co., 53 W. Va. 87; Long v. Weller, 29 Grat. 347.
When a landowner has created a servitude upon one portion of his land for the benefit of another portion, and conveys the servient part, there is an implied reservation of the easement, if it is essential to the use and enjoyment of the land reserved, and such right passes with the dominant estate, as appurtenant thereto. Nor does the existence of such an easement constitute a breach of the covenant of general warranty, if the easement is so open and apparent that the contracting parties are presumed to have contracted with reference to the condition in which the land then was, and it is not to be supposed that the purchaser agreed' to pay any more for the land than he thought it was worth with the burden on it. Such a burden has been held not to constitute a breach of covenant against encumbrances: Kutz v. McCune, 22 Wis. 628, 99 Am. Dec. 85; Devlin on Deeds, sec. 908; Prescott v. Williams, 5 Mete.. 429, 39 Am. Dec. 688. If not a breach of covenant against encumbrances, a fortiori it is not a breach of a covenant of general warranty, which relates more particularly to the title than it does to encumbrances.
The decisions of other states are not uniform upon the doctrine of an implied reservation in favor of a grantor, but we think the rule, as we have stated it, is supported by the better considered cases, as well as by the more modern text writers on the subject.
A mill-dam is essential to a water power grist mill, without it tbe mill, which is a part of the realty on which it stands', would be useless. Plaintiffs’ predecessor in title knew that it backed the water upon his land, it had done so for many years before he bought it, and he is presumed to have taken the land subject to a continuation of that condition. Plaintiffs, his privies in estate, took the land subj'ect to the burden upon it as appurtenant to the other tract of land with the mill on it, and the mill, together with the appurtenant easement, passed to defendant.
The fact .that the mill and dam were in a dilapidated condition at the time plaintiffs purchased, does not affect the case. Defendant’s right was appurtenant to the dominant land and passed with it, it was such a right as could be lost only by adverse possession by the owner of the servient land, for such length of time as would bar an action of ejectment. Clark v. Beard, 69 W. Va. 313, 71 S. E. 188.
Appellants contend that defendant, in repairing the dam] raised it higher than it was before, and caused more of his land to be overflowed. This, of course, he could not lawfully do. But their contention, in this regard, is not supported by the evidence. Two or three of their own witnesses testified that the dam was about as high as it was before, and some of the defendant’s witnesses say that it is no higher than it was at first. Wé will affirm the decree.
Affirmed