114 Mass. 340 | Mass. | 1874
This petition is brought under the St. of 1873, c. 178, which provides that “ any person who is in the enjoyment of an easement shall be held to be in possession of real property, within the meaning and for the purposes of section forty-nine of chapter one hundred and thirty-four of the General Statutes.”
The purpose of this statute was manifestly not to change the interpretation of the General Statutes, or the rules of proceeding under them, which had been adopted by the courts; but to bring another class of interests in real estate within the same provisions for the quieting of titles. The same rules of proceeding and determination are accordingly to be followed, so far as applicable.
The provision in regard to land, Gen. Sts. c. 134, § 49, is construed strictly; or, rather, reasonably, having reference to the end sought, and the means of securing it. Clouston v. Shearer, 99 Mass. 209. One rule, in regard to real estate, is that the petitioner must show an actual possession and taking of the profits. Title merely, as in the case of flats over which the tide ebbs and flows, is not sufficient. Munroe v. Ward, 4 Allen, 150. Another rule is that a respondent will not be required to bring a suit unless it is made to appear that the right which he claims can be fairly and conclusively tried by such a suit as may be directed. Thus, one who claimed an estate in reversion, after a life estate in possession of the petitioner who denied the reversion and claimed the fee, was not required to bring a suit to settle the controversy. Tisdale v. Brabrook, 102 Mass. 374.
The easement claimed in this case is that of flowing certain lands of one Burgin; and it is alleged that said Burgin “ makes some claim adverse to the said estate of your petitioner.” The petition does not set forth such an actual enjoyment of an easement in or upon the land of the respondent, as to bring the case within the rules established for such proceedings. Bowditch v. Gardner, 113 Mass. 315. It alleges that the petitioner, for the
The aEegation of seisin in fee must be understood as having reference to the character and quality of the title by which the petitioner holds the right or easement which is claimed, and not to the actual possession or mode of enjoyment. The latter is particularly set forth, and corresponds precisely with that exercise of the right of a miE-owner to maintain a dam to raise water for working his null, which is given by the mill act, Gen. Sts. c. 149. Such exercise of the right of flowage is not the enjoyment of an easement in the land flowed. It is not adverse to the title or possession of the owner; and being permitted by law, and not actionable except by complaint for compensation, it will not ripen into title by lapse of time. When the right has become absolute by payment of gross damages, or by exercise of the right without compensation for more than twenty years, it is commonly caEed an easement. But it is an easement in respect of the use of the stream only, and not an interest in or right over the land flowed. Williams v. Nelson, 23 Pick. 141. Murdock v. Stickney, 8 Cush. 113. Storm v. Manchaug Co. 13 Allen, 10.
The right to maintain the dam and to keep up the head of water is given to all miE-owners by statute. The flowage of adjacent lands is incidental, and compensation is made according to the degree of injury. But the right to occupy the surface of the land with the water of the pond is not taken, and the landowner may exclude it if he sees fit to do so. And when the right oi the miE-owner becomes absolute by paying gross damages or bjprescription, it is only a right to keep up the dam without rendering compensation for such incidental injury.
From this examination of the nature- of the right exercised by a miE-owner, we think it manifest that the difficulty -in the way
He cannot maintain trespass, because the flowing is the natural result of a lawful act by the petitioner. It is not suggested that any act has been done except to set the water back upon the land by means of the dam in the river. The petitioner would hardly be willing to waive the protection of the statute, for the purpose of such a suit. A writ of entry is even less appropriate as a means of putting such a claim of right in issue.
It is contended that the issue in a complaint for compensation, which the statute provides to be tried in court to determine the title and rights of the parties, before issuing the warrant for a jury to assess the damages, is adapted to the desired purpose, and in all respects adequate and appropriate. But the issue to be tried in such a proceeding, aside from the title in the land alleged to be flowed, which is not in question in this case, is merely that of the liability of the mill-owner to render compensation. The answer in bar may be “ that the respondent has a right to maintain his dam for an agreed price, or without any compensation, or any other matter which may show that the complainant cannot maintain the suit.” However extensive the title or right set up in bar as “ other matter ” showing that the suit cannot be maintained, yet the adjudication cannot embrace more than the claim of the complainant. If judgment be for the respondent, it will establish his right to maintain his dam at an agreed price, or without compensation, as the case may be; but it will not establish his claim to other rights in the complainant’s land. It is conclusive upon the right to affect the land incidentally by keeping up a head of water, because that is the res- adjudicata. But a claim of right to occupy the land with the water of a pond or reservoir, to the exclusion of the owner, or the restriction of
As this larger right of use, amounting to an easement in or upon the land itself, cannot be established in this mode, and the right to maintain the dam, without compensation for the incidental flowage, is not an easement enjoyed in respect of the land flowed, it must follow that this petition cannot be maintained. The demurrer is accordingly sustained, and the
Petition dismissed, with costs.