202 Mass. 31 | Mass. | 1909
This is an action of contract to recover for breach of a warranty against incumbrances. The premises to which the action relates are situated in Rochester upon a brook or stream called “ Cedar Swamp Brook.” A part of it is also known as “Dexter River,” and another part as “Haskell Brook.” The premises consist in part of upland and in part of bog or swamp land. It is only in regard to the bog or swamp portion of the premises, comprising about an acre, that it is contended that there has been a breach of the covenant. A short distance below the plaintiff’s land is an old dam called the “ Dexter Mill Dam,” over which a road passes. There was formerly a mill called the “ Dexter Mill.” The mill had not been operated for thirty to thirty-five years, and it and the dam had fallen into decay. Above the plaintiff’s premises is a mill called the “ Haskell Mill ”
We think that the ruling requested should have been given. The Haskell Mill, it appears, was a saw mill with about eight and one half feet fall and a mill pond of about three hundred and fifty acres. No contention is made that the mill was not appropriate to the size and capacity of the stream and the quantity of water usually flowing therein, or that, when operated, it was not operated in a reasonable and proper manner, or in the usual and ordinary way in which such mills are operated. In the absence of any restriction to the contrary the owners of it had the right to operate their mill at any and all seasons of the year, and there was nothing to show that there was any such restriction. The creation of a head and fall of water and the use of it for mill pur
The conclusion to which we have come on the main question renders it unnecessary to consider the other rulings requested.
Exceptions sustained.