32 Vt. 724 | Vt. | 1860
This is an action on the case to recover damsges occasioned by the setting back and flow of the water upon the plaintiff’s premises, on account of the wrongful obstruction thereof by the mill dam of the defendants.,
The case discloses that Samuel Safford originally owned a water privilege, on which were a dam, mill pond and mills in operation from time immemorial, and also owned the lands surrounding and bordering upon said pond, of which lands the garden and house lot of the plaintiff were, for a long time, parcel; that a public highway has for a long period existed along upon the eastern side of said pond, a little distance from it; that the plaintiff’s premises lie upon and east of said road, and in no part bounded by said pond ; that the plaintiff, through several mesne conveyances, derived title to his garden by and from said Safford, dated August 11, 1817, and to his house lot by deed direct from said Safford to himself, dated May 3d, 1827. The dam in question (replacing a former one) was built in 1811, and was repaired in 1828, and the mills and privilege were purchased by the defendants in 1853, who in the same year repaired said dam. The plaintiff’s evidence seems to have been directed to the point that, by said repairs, the dam was raised above its former elevation, and that thereby the alleged damage to the plaintiff had been caused. This seems to have been the^ principal subject of controversy upon the evidence. The county court, in the charge to the jury, assumed, upon the construction and effect of said deeds of Safford, that, as to the plaintiff, Safford by said deeds parted with his right to affect the land conveyed by them, by keeping up any dam at all, and if such right thereafter existed, it was in virtue of a user of more than fifteen years. Under such a construction of said deeds, it became unimportant how-high the dam had been at any time prior to the commencement of such user, or how high it was, and how the premises now owned by the plain
The defendants claim rights in reference to the condition and height of the dam, and the consequent flow of the water, that might be seriously prejudiced and restricted by such a construction and operation as were given to said deeds by the county court.
Our first business is to consider the exception taken upon this branch of the charge.
While Safford owned the mill privilege and the surrounding lands, including, as parcel thereof, what the plaintiff now owns, it was his right to do with said property whatever he pleased. In the exercise of that right he created and continued for a long period the mill pond, by means of a dam of such height as served his purposes in operating a mill in the usual course of that kind of business. “When the land burdened and the land benefitted belong to the same owner, he may change the qualities of its several parts at his will, and his express volition evidenced by his acts must be as effectual to impress a new quality upon his inheritance as the implied consent arising from his long continued acquiescence Gale & Wli. on Easements, 39.
While Safford was thus the owner, of course the idea of an easement could not attach to such a treatment and use of the stream of water, relatively to the adjacent land. That land, with the stream and the use of it as a mill privilege, constituted an entire estate. Such dam and the use of it were parcel of such estate, and not an easement, or in the nature of an casement, nor an incumbrance, or of the nature of an inqujnbraiice. The use of the mill privilege, in the manner shown by the evidence, and the effect of it, impressed a condition upon the adjacent soil that might affect its suitableness and value for various purposes, might render it less suitable for agricultural or building purposes than it would have been if the stream had not been obstructed by the dam.
Such being the condition of the estate of Safford, produced by the dam existing at a certain height, and causing its natural effect upon the water of the stream at its various grades of height, in causing it to set and flow back upon the adjacent land, Safford
The deeds, in terms, purport to convey only certain parcels of land specifically described, in no part abutting upon the stream. If they are to be held to have divested Safford of his right to affect said land by the continuance of his dam, such result is not directly produced by the primary force of the terms of the granting part of the deeds. It would seem to be the consequential result of the covenant against incumbrances. Such covenant has relation to rights existing in, or in relation to, the property conveyed, appertaining to parties other than the grantor, and which may be claimed and exercised, and enforced upon and against said property, as against such grantor and his assigns.
Now it it obvious, that, in this sense, no such incumbrance existed upon the property now owned by the plaintiff, while the title to it was in Safford. Of course, then, at the moment of passing the title and making the covenant by the delivery of the deeds, the property was free from incumbrance, and so there could not have been a breach at that time, in virtue of the state of the title to, or of rights then existing in, or in respect to, said property. Is it matter of legal intendment that the grantor should, by force of such covenant, be estopped from exercising any right which, if it had existed in, and been exercised by, a third person, prior to said conveyance by Safford, would have constituted an incumbrance? So to hold would seem to be giving to such a covenant a scope and effect beyond what has boon regarded as its ordinary and legal limits, and no precedent or authority has been cited to justify us in so holding.
It would have presented a novel case if the defendant, immediately after the conveyance to him by Safford, had brought an action against him for the breach of his covenant against incumbrances, and sought to maintain it on the ground of the existence
In view of the infrequency of modem cases in which the subject of this branch of the charge is involved, it seems proper to consider somewhat more in detail, and in reference to both principle and authority, the true character, construction and effect of Safford’s deeds, as bearing on the view taken by the county court.
In-Gale & Whateley on Easements, p. 40, it is said, “it is true that, strictly speaking, a man cannot subject one part of his property to another by an easement, for no man can have an easement in his own property; but he obtains the same object by the exercise of another right, the general right of property; but he has not the less permanently altered the quality of the two part of his heritage ; and if, after the annexation of peculiar qualities, he alien one part of his heritage, it seems but reasonable, if the alterations thus made are palpable and manifest, that &■ purchaser should take the land burthened or benefitted, as the case may be, by the qualities which the previous owner had undoubtedly the right to attach tojit. * * * *
There is no reason why a purchaser should not exercise the same degree of caution in ascertaining what easements his projected purchase is liable to in favor of his vendor as well as in favor of other adjoining owners.”
The learned authors show,'from a most thorough examination and analysis of the cases, that this view has been recognized and acted upon by the courts from a very early period in the record of judicial decisions in England, and also show that'the law of the Givil Code of France accords therewith. They also show that in this class of cases, while the law will make all necessary implications to prevent the grantor from derogating from his own
The»law of the Givil Gode is, “if the proprietor of two heritages, between which there exists an apparent sign of servitude, disposes of one of the heritages without any stipulation being contained in the contract respecting the servitude, it continues to exist, actively or passively, in favor of the heritage alienated or upon it,” which is tantamount to saying that such servitude continues to exist in favor of the heritage not alienated upon that which is alienated, as well as the reverse. And this is equally so where the grantor of a portion of an entire estate has made that portion subject to the convenience of another, by some express act done during the union of the different portions of such estate.
It is laid down as an unquestioned proposition, that, “ upon the severance of a heritage, a grant will be implied of all those continuous and apparent easements which have in fact been used by the owner during the unity, though they have had no legal existence as easements ;” and the doctrine is equally well established that the law will imply a reservation of like easements in favor of the part of the heritage retained by such grantor. f On this subject see Gale & Whateley on Easements, ch. 5, and cases cited.
The application of these doctrines to the present case is obvious upon recurring, by way of recapitulation, to the leading facts, viz: that Safford had long owned and kept up the dam and mill, .during which time he was also the owner of the lands surrounding and bordering upon said mill pond and mill, including the parcel which the plaintiff now owns and occupies as a house lot and garden. lie had thus subjected those bordering and adjacent lands to the use and convenience of the mill privilege and mills; and being thus subjected, he conveyed the parcel of them now owned by the plaintiff. This condition of the estate was obvious, and had been continuous, and was of a character showing that it was designed to continue thereafter, as it has in fact done. ' This, then, was a palpable and impressed condition, made upon the property by the voluntary act of the owner; and we
As we understand the case of Carey v. Daniels, 8 Met. 466, in an elaborate opinion delivered by Shaw, Oh. J., the law of the subject was held to be as we have now set it forth, and we regard the case itself to be a direct authority for our present application of the law. Without stating in detail the various conveyances by which the parties to that case derived their respective titles, it will be sufficient, for the purpose of showing the principle and its application, to say that the plaintiff’s grantor owned a mill with its privileges and appurtenances, and while so owning it he built another dam a little below, and erected a mill upon it, and for a period continued to use both mills. In times of high water the lower dam caused the water to set back upon the wheels of the upper mill and impede their operation, in which event it was the custom for the hands of the upper mill to open a waste gate in the lower dam or mill and let off the excess of water. In this situation of the property the upper mill property was sold and conveyed with all privileges and appurtenances, and with covenants against incumbrances created by the grantor, but without any reservation as to the lower dam and mill, which the plaintiff’s grantor retained, but subsequently sold and conveyed to the defendant. In high water the plaintiff experienced the inconvenience of the back water caused by the lower dam, and claimed that by yirtue of the conveyance to him, he was entitled to hold his mill free from the injurious effects of the lower dam, and, at any rate, that he had the right to open the waste gate of the lower dam, as had been the custom when the entire property was owned by the same proprietor, both of which claims were denied, and therefore said suit was instituted. It was held that no implication from necessity arose against the defendant’s right to continue the lower dam, and that there was nothing to extend the operation of the deed under which the plaintiff held, beyond the plain import of its terms, which was to carry the upper water power, mills and land, as they were then modified and appropriated by
In accordance with the views thus expressed, we are led to regard the charge to have been erroneous as to the construction and effect of the deeds of Safford through which the plaintiff acquired his title. We think they should be held to have conveyed the parcels which the plaintiff now owns in the condition in which they were at the time of the respective conveyances by Safford, as affected by the dam at the height it then was, and that the right to maintain and continue said dam at such height was not impaired or affected by those deeds, either by the terms of the granting part or by the covenants against incumbrances.
This result upon the first ground of exception, leads us to the disposition of the other exception taken to the charge.
If -the alleged injury to the plaintiff’s premises was produced by keeping the dam at the height it was, at the time of the conveyances by Safford, it can make no difference whether the water was caused to set back over the surface, or prevented the underground streams and currents from percolating through the soil off from the plaintiff’s premises. In either case there would be no right of recovery. But the court charged the jury “ that if the defendants had raised their pond since 1853, higher than they had a right to do by the previous uses, and thereby had obstructed the water in subterranean streams from passing off as formerly, and had caused it to gush out upon, or percolate through , and stand upon the plaintiff’s land and in his cellar to his injury, then the defendants were liable.”
This charge, in connection with the request of the defendants, involves a consideration of the distinction to be taken between
So far as flowing surface water was concerned, the plaintiff could not call in question the right of the defendants to keep their dam of an/ height they chose, provided it did not cause the water to flow upon or soak into his land. He was not bounded upon the stream, and so was not a riparian owner. He could not question the defendants’ right to overflow the whole surface up to his line, and in this respect it could be no element in his case whether the defendants’ pond had been raised higher since 1853 than it had been by previous uses. It could do him no injury, unless it should cause 1 lie water to come upon or soak into his land.
The question then arises whether, in case the defendants, within and since the year 1853, have kept their dam higher than it was at the time of the conveyances by Safford, and thereby, by causing a greater height of water in their pond, has impeded the flow of the underground currents through and off from the plaintiff’s premises, for this cause alone they are liable to the plaintiff for any injury he may have sustained thereby. This question excludes the idea that, as against the plaintiff, the defendants have transcended their right in respect to the surface water, or infringed any right of the plaintiff in regard to it. For the purposes of this question, the case stands much the same as if the defendants, upon the western margin of the road adjacent to the plaintiff’s premises, but upon their own land, had sunk and constructed an impervious wall, and thereby, in the language of the charge, “ obstructed the water in subterranean streams from passing off as formerly, and had caused it to gush out upon, and percolate through, and stand upon, the plaintiff’s' land and in his cellar, to his injury.” Can it make any difference how this effect upon the underground streams is produced, whether by a bank of stones upon the defendants’ land or a bank of water-? Have not the defendants as good a right to pile up the one as the other ? It would seem difficult to assign a reason why not.
In Chatfield v. Wilson, 28 Vt. 19, it was held that the law of running surface streams is not applicable to percolating.under
No reason occurs to us why a party should be liable for the result of acts upon his own land which impede the' flowing of underground currents from the land of an adjoining owner, thus producing injury, when it. is conceded that he would not be liable for acts that would produce injury by preventing the flow of such currents into the the territory of such adjoining owner: why it is less unlawful for my neighbor to drain my well by digging one near mine, on his own soil, than to flood my cellar by the obstruction of a wall or other impediment that prevents the flow of water underground from my premises. |
Our late very learned and able associate, Judge Bennett, in the course of the elaborate opinion in Chatfield v. Wilson, says, “ the laws of the existence^of water underground and of its progress while there, are not 'Uniform, and cannot be known with any degree of certainty, nor can its progress be regulated. It sometimes rises to a great height, and sometimes moves in collateral directions, by some secret influences beyond our comprehension. The secret, changeable and uncontrollable character of underground water, in its operations, is so diverse and uncertain that we cannot well subject it to the regulations of law, nor build upon it a system of rules, as is done in the case of surface
The case of Greenleaf v. Francis is cited by Judge Bennett, which (as he says)' held that “ no action would lie against a man who dug a well on his own land, although he thereby took the water from his neighbor’^ well, in the absence of all right acquired by grant or adverse user." The case is really put on the ground that “every one has the liberty of doing on his own ground whatever he pleases, even though he occasion some damage to his neighbor.”
Being unable to see why the principle and the reasoning in the decision of Chatfield v. Wilson are not applicable to the part of the charge we are considering, we are forced to regard that part of the charge as erroneous.
These being the only points that were discussed in the argument by the defendants’ counsel, we refrain from any consideration of other points that might have been raised upon the requests of the defendants, and the refusal of the court to charge as requested.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the county court.