The conveyance to the plaintiff was of land on which was a dwelling-house then occupied by her, and this clause immediately followed the description of the land: “together with the privilege of drawing water from a pipe laid in the ground from a well on my adjoining land to said Davis house as now used.” The conveyance was a quitclaim deed, with habendum of “ the granted premises, with all the privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging,” and with a covenant
It was held in Greenleaf v. Francis,
The word “ well,’,’ as a general term of description in a deed, designates the portion of land under and occupied by the excavation and its surrounding retaining walls, and by any structures or appliances built upon the land to facilitate its use, and also the water actually at any time in the excavation. Johnson v. Rayner,
It is not necessary, however, for the decision of the present case, to determine between the view of the law of percolating water held in most of the decisions above cited, and that held in Bassett v. Salisbury Manuf. Co. and Swett v. Cutts by the Supreme Court of New Hampshire. Adopting either view, upon the construction which we give to the plaintiff’s deed, the result is the same. A grantor can so grant and covenant, that he and those claiming under him will be precluded from interfering with the supply of even percolating water to the dominant land, and may thus prevent uses of the servient land which are reasonable, and would be otherwise justifiable. Whitehead v. Parks, 2 H. & N. 870. Johnstown Cheese Manuf. Co. v. Veghte,
Construing the plaintiff’s grant, What was intended by, and what is the fair and reasonable construction to be given to the clause, “together with the privilege of drawing water from a pipe laid in the ground from a well on my adjoining land to said Davis house as now used ? ” In how much of the grantor’s adjoining lands did the plaintiff acquire an easement, and what was its nature and extent ? She plainly took an easement in-all that would have passed by a conveyance of the well as a term of description, and in so much of the adjacent soil as was necessary to the security and integrity of the well as a structure, and to the preservation of the pipe in a condition for use. The concluding words of the clause, “ as now used,” are naturally to be referred to those next preceding, and if so, serve only to limit the use of the privilege, whatever it may be, to the Davis dwelling-house. If, however, they refer back to the word “ privilege,” they still relate to and limit the extent to which water may be drawn, or the use to which it may be put, and do not relate to the words “ on my adjoining land,” or of themselves imply an obligation on the part of the grantor to continue to use his land in the same manner as at the date of the conveyance. The clause does not in terms stipulate that the house shall receive an adequate supply of water. It does not appear that the pipe was at the bottom of the well, and it is matter of common knowledge
The language of the clause is satisfied by holding that it gives the plaintiff the right to draw water whenever that portion of land designated as the well, remaining intact as a structure adapted to receive and hold fcuch water as may percolate into it, contains water which will gravitate to the house through the pipe. It is impossible to know in what direction percolating water finds its way into a well; perhaps only through the bottom of the excavation, and perhaps through the surrounding, as well as the subjacent land. Its ways of approach, and its amount, vary with the operation of obscure natural causes, not controllable by the owner of the land through which it passes. If the grant of such a well, or of the privilege of drawing water from it, were held to impose an obligation upon all the land from which the well might derive a supply of water, the burden would be very indefinite, uncertain, and shifting, and would tend, without any adequate corresponding benefit, to prevent the improvement of land by buildings, and its use for mining, quarrying, and many other useful purposes. Such a result would be contrary to the public good; and the nature and tendency of the burden have been held to be good reasons for the denial of the existence of any such obligation. Haldeman v. Bruckhart, 45 Penn. St. 514. An intention to subject a large territory to such a burden for the benefit of a single house lot is not to be lightly presumed.
Applying to the present case a test which has been used in the decision of cases not entirely dissimilar, the plaintiff, as the owner of an easement, can have no greater right than she would have had if the well and pipe had been conveyed to her as land. See Bliss v. Greeley,
There is in the report nothing which makes it reasonable to suppose that the parties to the plaintiff’s deed intended that the remainder of the thirty acres, of which her lot was but a small part, should be burdened with the servitude of maintaining the water in the well at a height which would enable her to draw water from the pipe. The land was on a public street in Haverhill, which had then been a city for nearly ten years; the street was parallel with, and not far from, the Merrimac River, and the city was supplied with water for domestic purposes by an aqueduct company. Under such circumstances, it seems certain that, if it had been the intention of the parties to impose upon the remaining land of the vendor an obligation, in favor of the plaintiff’s house lot, which might prevent the improvement for many purposes of a tract much more than a hundred times larger than the dominant land, that intention would have been expressed in clear and definite terms. The creation of such an obligation is not a usual or natural part of such a transaction as the sale of a city house lot, and an intention to make it ought to be clearly shown. In the case of Johnstown Cheese Manuf. Co. v. Veghte, ubi supra, both the circumstances and the language of the deed made it evident that it was the intention of the parties to place the whole of the land retained by the grantor under an obligation to secure to the dominant land the necessary supply of water, and the language of the deed was particularly full. In Bliss v. Greeley, ubi supra, however, the deed was similar to that in the present case, and the grant was held to be limited and specific, and not to impose any burden upon the remainder of the grantor’s farm. The covenant to warrant and defend adds nothing to the extent of the grant, and no greater right passed as an appurtenance than was expressed in the description of the premises conveyed. Although, in the condition of things which •existed in 1891, the excavation on the defendant’s land cut off the supply of water from the well, it cannot be said that when
Judgment on the finding for the defendant.
