78 Me. 381 | Me. | 1886
This is an action on the case for diverting the water running in an aqueduct to plaintiff’s house and stable. From the evidence reported, the following facts, essential to a correct understanding of the case, affirmatively appear.
In 1836, Daniel Herrick look a lease of a certain spring with the right to conduct water therefrom through the lessor’s land for the term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years. Having soon after obtained the right to lay pipes through adjoining-lands, the lessee immediately constructed an aqueduct from said spring to Charleston Corner, a mile distant, more or less. The several places taking water from this aqueduct were accustomed to pay an annual water rent, except the Jacob Dority place, the Isaac Dunning place, now owned by the defendant, and the Truxton Dority place, now owned by the plaintiff. These were the first three places lying along the line of the aqueduct, and in the order named; and it is claimed by the plaintiff that these three received the water under perpetual rights derived by grant from said Herrick, or by prescription. It appears that the parties occupying these places, and their successors, have always borne their proportional part of the expense in maintaining the aqueduct, and that the water has run to their houses and barns by mean» of branch pipes in the same manner for more than forty-five years. After leaving the defendant’s premises the aqueduct passes to.the plaintiff’s land in the rear of his dwelling house, and there the water has been accustomed to enter what is termed a main cistern, and from that to run in branch pipes to his house and stable. This continued till the fall of 1881, when it is alleged that the defendant diverted the water, thereby preventing it from flowing to the premises of the plaintiff, and for such diversion this action is brought.
Daniel Herrick died in 1864, and his son, as administrator on his estate, in 1869 sold the rights of the deceased in this aqueduct to the defendant, and one David II. Patten, who then lived where the plaintiff now lives. Patten died, and by will left all his property to his wife and daughter, who in 1879 conveyed to the plaintiff the premises where he now lives, by warranty deed, adding to the description this clause — "also all the brauch water
A short time after this conveyance they conveyed their undivided half of the aqueduct, derived from the administrator of Daniel Herrick’s estate, to the defendant, who since that conveyance has assumed the absolute right to control the water in the aqueduct to the entire exclusion of the plaintiff, and has completely diverted the same from his premises.
The plaintiff’s claim is based upon the ground that this water right was an easement legally appurtenant to his estate and passed to him at the time he received his conveyance from the Pattens.
To determine the correctness of this position we must -first ascertain whether the easement was one that had ripened into a legal right and had become legally attached to the premises conveyed. For this easement, originating from water supplied by a spring not situated upon land belonging to the grantor of the plaintiff’s premises, would not pass as an appurtenance to the estate conveyed unless it had thus become attached to the same. Spaulding v. Abbot, 55 N. H. 423.
But when an easement, although not originally belonging to an estate, has become appurtenant to it, either by express or implied grant, or by prescription which presupposes a grant, a conveyance of that estate will carry with it such easement whether mentioned in the deed or not, although it may not be necessary to the enjoyment of the estate by the grantee. 2 Wash. R. P. *28. Kent v. Waite, 10 Pick. 138. Hence if Patten in his lifetime, aside from any interest conveyed by Herrick’s administrator, was the owner of this easement as annexed to this particular estate, it passed with the estate to his wife and daughter, and from them would have passed to this plaintiff as appurtenant to the premises conveyed, even if no mention had been made of it in their deed to him.
And from all the evidence in the case, any extended summary of which .would hardly be deemed proper in an opinion, we can arrive at no other conclusion than that this easement had become appurtenant to the estate long before it came into the hands of Patten. The testimony of Place shows that in 1845, after it had
As tending to corroborate these facts it will be found upon examination that the evidence is clear and uncontradicted, that for more than forty-five years the plaintiff and those under whom he claims, have enjoyed the use of the water flowing substantially in the same manner to the house and stable upon the premises. During all this time it has passed through the premises formerly known as the Isaac Dunning place, and now held by the defendant. During all these forty-five years, the right of the plaintiff and of his predecessors in title thus to take and use the waiter, and to have it flow to them, has never been questioned or contested by any one till this controversy arose.
Even if there was not evidence of an express grant, these facts, showing an adverse and exclusive use of water during so long a period, might well be considered presumptive evidence of
Under circumstances like these, the language of the court in Tinkham v. Arnold, 3 Maine, 123, may be considered as peculiarly appropriate. "The law,” says MelleN, C. J., in that case, " gives a natural construction to the conduct of the parties; and, after a long succession of years, presumes that the person enjoying the easement, having no right to enjoy it unless under the grant of the true owner, had such a grant; and that in consequence of it he had never been molested in his enjoyment.”
What was the effect of the deed from the administrator of Daniel Herrick to the defendant and David H. Patten, and what was thereby conveyed to them ?
The interest which Daniel Herrick had in the aqueduct was not only the right to draw water from a particular spring, but to have pipes laid in the soil of another, and for that purpose to enter thereon, repair and renew such pipes. This interest was more than an easement in gross ; it was an interest in the realty, assignable, descendible and devisable. It was such an interest as was capable of being assigned as to a part or in gross. Easements growing out of it might be acquired by grant or otherwise, and thus become the objects of title in others. Amidon v. Harris, 113 Mass. 64. Thus the right to take water from this aqueduct was an easement, and so far as this right had not by grant or otherwise passed from the owner to any particular person or persons, or become annexed to any particular estate or estates, the same was subject to assignment by him. Goodrich v. Burbank, 12 Allen, 459; Amidon v. Harris, supra. But whatever easements or rights had been acquired by grant or otherwise from the owner of the aqueduct,
But whatever title or interest the deceased Herrick had in the-aqueduct passed to them, and of this they were owners im common.
Assuming that the court should find that an easement existed, such as we have mentioned, and had once become appurtenant to the premises now owned by the plaintiff, it is contended in defence that such easement became extinguished by unity of title to the dominant and servient estates in the same person— by David H. Patten owning the premises to which the easement had become annexed, and by taking to himself, by the administrator’s deed, a half interest undivided in the main aqueduct.
That an easement will become extinguished by unity of title and possession of the dominant and servient estates in the same person by the same right, is a principle of law too general and elementary to be questioned. But this principle, like many others, is subject to qualifications. In order that unity of title to the two estates should operate to extinguish an existing easement, the ownership of the two estates should be coextensive, equal in validity, quality, and all other circumstances of right. If one is held in severalty and the other only as to a fractional part thereof by the same person, there will be no extinguishment of such easement, Ritger v. Parker, 8 Cush. 147; 2 Wash. R. P. *85. Thus it was held by Abingbe, C. B., in the English court of Exchequer, in Thomas v. Thomas, 2 Cr. M. &
In the application of these principles to the facts in the case at ibar, we find that while Patten had an estate in fee in the ¡■premises to which the easement was annexed, his interest in the ■ aqueduct derived from the administrator’s deed, was but a chattel interest, not only fractional in quantity, but limited in its duration vto the term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years. Gay, Petitioner, 5 Mass. 419; Chapman v. Gray, 15 Mass. 445; Brewster v. Hill, 1 N. H. 350; Hollenbeck v. McDonald, 112 Mass. 249; Bouvier’s Law Dict. Title, " Chattel Interest,” ‘"Estate for years.”
There was, therefore, no such unity of title and possession as would extinguish the easement in the premises while held by David H. Patten, and consequently they passed by devise to his wife and daughter, the plaintiff’s grantors, with the easement «till subsisting and appurtenant thereto.
They also took the one-half interest in the main aqueduct ■which Patten had acquired in his lifetime by the administrator’s •deed. While thus holding the legal title to the premises with '.the easement in the use of the water running to them as part and ¡parcel thereof; while also holding the half interest in the .aqueduct, they conveyed to the plaintiff, adding to the description of the premises this clause — "also all the branch water pipes running from the main cistern to the house and stable.”
This conveyance to the plaintiff being made and recorded prior to the conveyance from them to the defendant of their interest in the main aqueduct, may be properly held to convey to the plaintiff whatever might be fairly said to pass by the terms of the deed, and which they owned at the time of the conveyance. Had the clause in relation to the branch water pipes not been inserted in the deed, the easement relative to the use of water being one actually belonging to the estate conveyed, would have passed by implication. Philbrook v. Ewing, 97 Mass. 134.
Laying out of the case all oral testimony in relation to what was intended to be conveyed, and looking at the deed in reference to its terms, the subject matter, and the circumstances surrounding the transaction, we feel satisfied that not only was it the legal effect of the deed, but also the intention of the grantors, to convey certain premises with the branch water pipes then in the soil and in use upon the granted premises, as in the case of Coolidge v. Hager, 43 Vt. 9; and that the defendant by his deed from the same parties, which was executed shortly after-wards, received a distinct property from that which had been conveyed to the plaintiff, being the same undivided half interest in the main aqueduct which years before had been deeded to-Patten by the administrator of Daniel Herrick.
We have examined at some length the principal grounds upon which both parties base their claims. It is . unnecessary to consider any others, inasmuch as we are of the opinion that the' plaintiff is entitled to prevail.
The only remaining question is that in relation to damages. The acts of the defendant in diverting the flow of water to the' plaintiff’s premises was a misfeasance such as would render him liable in this action. It was in the nature of a continuing-nuisance. The evidence in relation to these acts indicate that,
Judgment for the plaintiff for forty dollars damages.