26 W. Va. 644 | W. Va. | 1885
The first enquiry in this ease is : Hid the court below err in overruling the demurrer to the declaration ? The only supposed defect in the declaration was, that the premises, the possession of which is claimed by the plaintiff, were not “described in the declaration with convenient certainty, so that from such description possession thereof may be delivered,” as required by the Code, ch. 90, sec. 8. If the descrip
The only other enquiry to be made is: Did the circuit court err in finding for the plaintiff and entering the judgment for her upon the evidence, which all appears in the record? This depends entirely upon whether the true boundary of the tract of land conveyed by the deed of April 4, 1872, to the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company was bounded by the top of the bank of the race or gut, as claimed by the plaintiff, or extended, as claimed by the defendant, to either the low-water-mark of the race or to the center of the race. That it did not extend to the center of the race is to
The plaintiff in error cites Camden and Karnes v. Creel, 4 W. Va. p. 366, where the Court say: “ There can be no doubt where an individual having .title to lands lying on both sides of a water course grants the lands lying on one side
.The next enquiry,is: Bid this tract of land of 25 75-100 acres conveyed by this deed to the defendant include the land down to the ordinary' or low-water mark of this race? This much, it is insisted, was conveyed by this deed. In the first place in construing this deed we have a right to look to the wording of the contract between the parties of date of Octo
Many cases of this kind are cited in a note to Salter v. Jonas, 10 Broom 469, as reported in 16 Am. R., 233, and a number of them are relied upon by each of the counsel of the parties in this case. But it does seem to me that these cases and others like them really throw very little light upon the question before us. But there are cases, from which it may, I think, be fairly deduced, that, if the calls of a deed were to the edge of a river, which was not navigable, and thence with the northern line of such river the low-water of such river would be the boundary of such tract. Thus
. If therefore this race was a natural unnavigable river the fact in proof, that the stake, at which the courses upon it began, stood forty-three feet from the low water mark of the stream, would not prevent the low water mark of the stream being the boundary of this tract, though other stakes had been planted in the survey along the bank of this stream and all of them some distance from this low water mark.
It remains now to determine, whether it will be otherwise in the case before us, in which the lines are up the race on the boundary of the deed instead of lines up a natural stream, where as in this case the i’ace is the head-race of mills of the grantor located below the land granted. It is obvious that the principle reason for running of lines not on the bank of the natural stream, as the words of the deed would seem to direct, but running them along the line of the low water mark of the stream have no application to the case of such an artificial mill-race, as I have supposed, and as exists in this ease. This is, that in the case of the natural stream the parties to the deed never could have meant to leave a
In the ease before us this would be still more clearly unjustifiable, as, while this slip of ground■ between low-water mark and the top of the bank of the mill-race is necessary for the grantor, iu order that he may conveniently clean out from time to time his mill-race and have the full command of it in high or low water for floating logs upon it to his sawmill and for all other purposes, it does not appear to have been regarded, when the deed was made, as of any importance to the grantee, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company, and they could only use it to get water from the millrace for their engines and for other purposes; and they accordingly put it to no use and took no possession of any part of this strip for some eight years after the deed was made; that the parties to this deed did not contemplate any such use of the water of the mill-race under this deed, is, it seems to me, shown by the face of the deed; for there is in the deed the following clause:
“No. 4. The said parties of the first part also grant to the said Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company the right to use the water of a small stream which runs from the lands of said Clay through the said village of “Ronceverte,” near Centre street, for all railroad pui’poses, including the supply of all depots, stations and other buildings or structures erected upon lots No. 2 and No. 3. For this purpose the said
This shows that the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company provided in this deed for the use of the wafer of this run for the purposes, for which this pump or engine-house is now being used as well as for all other railroad purposes, and that the parties believed, that this run would furnish more than a sufficient supply of water for all such purposes. The clause in the deed “ that the railroad shall be so constructed as not to interfere with said Clay’s mill and boom-race, so as not to impede the flow of water or the floating of logs,” it is insisted, shows, that the construction, which I have put on this deed, is not the one contemplated by the parties, when the deed was made, as under this construction this clause would have been useless. But in fact this clause would have been useless, even if this deed bore the construction placed upon it by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, and the land of the company extended to low-water mark. The truth is, that this clause was inserted merely from abundant caution. Probably it was thought advisable, because in constructing bridges across this race to connect the two parcels of land conveyed to the company the bridges might be so constructed as to impede the floating of logs in the race. This provision clearly shows however, that the grantor considered he had rights in this race, which with unnecessary caution he endeavored to protect. The building of the eating-house, the kitchen of which is according to my construction of this deed on the land of the plaintiff, is regarded by counsel for plaintiff in error as evincing, that the parties construed this deed differently from what I have construed it, but as the evidence
For these reasons T am of opinion, that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed, and that the defendant in error should recover of the plaintiff: in error her costs in this Court expended and thirty dollars damages.
Affirmed.