11 Pa. Super. 401 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1899
Opinion by
The statement filed by plaintiff alleged that the defendant, through whose land a stream of water flowed from the land of plaintiff, “ on or about October 1, 1896, with a certain dam or causeway, did obstruct and raise the water of said stream, thereby taking the water of said stream out of its natural and accustomed channel, wherein it flowed, for thirty years last past and upwards, and causing the water of said stream to swell back, overflow and flood the land of plaintiff, to wit, two acres of land mentioned as aforesaid, which said wrongful and unlawful act of defendant has been persistent and continuous,” and damages were alleged in $500. The defendant entered the plea of “ not
The plaintiff proved the erection of the dam and flooding of plaintiff’s land, and rested. The defendant then produced evidence which established that a dam of some sort had been in existence at that place prior to the year 1837, that by deed, dated March 25, 1837, Joshua Yan Peed, plaintiff’s predecessor in title, granted to the then owner of defendant’s land, his heirs and assigns, the right to raise said dam ten inches higher than it then was and to swell the water in the stream accordingly. It was further shown that the dam had continued in existence down to 1891, when it was washed away by a flood, and that it was rebuilt by defendant in 1896. The defendant having rested, plaintiff offered to prove, by a witness on the stand and others, that at no time within thirty years prior to 1896 had the land in question been overflowed by the waters of the old dam, as it was by reason of that constructed in 1896. This for the purpose of showing that the dam constructed in 1896 was higher than that which had preceded it, and to show that the defendant or those under whom he claimed had already exercised the privilege of the grant and that under the grant there was no overflow. The defendant objected to this testimony as not pertinent to the matters charged in the declaration, and, generally, as incompetent and irrelevant. The objection was overruled,' the testimony admitted and a bill sealed for defendant, which is the subject of the first specification of error.
That the evidence directly tended to establish the fact that the new dam was higher than the dam which had been maintained, under the grant, during the preceding thirty years, is very clear. There was no evidence as to the height of the dam in 1837, when the right to raise it ten inches was granted, and testimony as to the height at which it was maintained during the entire thirty years prior to 1896 was proper to be submitted to the jury as evidence of the extent of the easement conveyed by and exercised under the grant. In the absence of all evidence as to the original level of the dam, the right to raise it ten inches might, after the lapse of sixty years, be reasonably inferred to have been exercised at the time of the grant, from proof of the extent to which the easement was asserted and used during the last thirty years. This position is conceded by the
The second and third specifications of error relate to the refusal of the learned court below to affirm the points submitted by defendant, which raised the same question of pleading, and
Judgment affirmed.