39 Me. 508 | Me. | 1855
— By the provisions of § 5, c. 126, R. S., any person sustaining damages in his lands, by their being overflowed by a mill-dam, may obtain compensation for the injury, by complaint to the District Court in the county where the lands so flowed shall be situated, or any part of the same.
Section 9 of same chapter authorizes the owner or occupant of such mill to appear and, plead in bar of such complaint, that the complainant has no right, title or estate in the lands alleged to be flowed; or that he has a right to maintain such dam and flow the lands for an agreed price or without compensation; or any other matter which may show that the complainant cannot maintain the suit.
The complainant’s land alleged to be flowed is situated
A grant of land, the exterior bounds of which included the several parcels now claimed by the complainant and defendant, was made by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to Edmund Bridge, Robert Page and Brown Emerson, July 2d, 1785. Bridge released Ms interest in the above grant to Page and Emerson, January 10th, 1787.
Nov. 17, 1789, Page conveyed to Emerson that part of the laud granted by the Commonwealth, on which the dam of the defendant, of which complaint is made, now stands.
Sept. 18, 1790, Emerson conveyed to Chase Elkins certain lands and privileges, from “ Lower Hale’s brook pond to Jennings’ meadow.” This deed, after describing the land conveyed, continues, “ as the said Elkins is to have all the said Emerson’s right of building a dam or dams on that part of said brook, above described, and also of building a dam and flowing Halo’s brook pond and ponds; said tract of land contains about twelve acres.”
So far as appears from the title deeds, Emerson, at the date of the above deed, was sole seized of the mill privilege now owned by defendant, and seized as tenant in common with Page, of one half the land now alleged to be flowed. There is no evidence that the flowed land has been divided, and the tenancy in common thus sundered.
It does not seem to be contested, that the title which Elkins acquired to the privileges and all his rights to flow, unless lost by adverse possession, have passed, by sundry mesne conveyances, to the defendant.
The earliest deed put into the case by the complainant, under which ho claims title to the premises alleged to be flowed, bears date Nov. 22, 1823. His sole seizin of the land was not controverted, subject however, as the defendant contends, to his right to flow, in common with the complainant.
The defendant contends that in 1790, Emerson being sole seized of the mill privileges below the lower pond, and at
The possession and seizin of one tenant in common, is the possession and seizin of the other, because such possession is not adverse to the right of his companion, but in support of their common title. And although one tenant in common takes the whole profits, yet this does not divest the possession of his companion. Greenl. Cruise, Tit. xx, Tenancy in common, § 14.
It is upon this general rule of law, as applicable to this class of tenancies, that the defendant relies, in his argument, to show that Emerson might lawfully flow the land owned in common by himself and Page, and also that the grantees of Emerson were entitled to the same rights.
The rule, though general in its terms, is subject to many qualifications. One tenant in common is not remediless in case his co-tenant shall assume absolute dominion over the common property. The right of each extends to all and every part of the common estate. Absolute exclusion of one tenant from any part, is a violation of his rights, for which the law will afford an appropriate remedy.
a If two tenants in common be of a folding, and the one of them disturb the other to erect hurdles, he shall have an action of trespass quare vi et arms for this disturbance.” 1 Coke, 200, b, [d.]
“ If two several owners of houses have a river in common between them, if one of them corrupt the river the other shall have an action upon his case.” Ibid, [e.]
One tenant in common is not authorized to exclude another from the possession of land owned in common, or to destroy a chattel, or to sell the whole of it. If one tenant in common of land oust his co-tenant, the latter may maintain ejectment. 3 Wils. 118; Brackett v. Norcross, 1 Maine,
The general rule seems to be well settled that one tenant in common cannot, as against his co-tenant, convey any part of the common property by metes and bounds, or even an undivided portion of such part. Bartlett v. Harlow, 12 Mass. 348; Peabody v. Minot, 24 Pick. 329; Griswold v. Johnson, 5 Con. 366; Smith v. Benson, 9 Vt. The reason is obvious. His title is to an undivided share of the whole, and he is not authorized to carve out his own part, nor to convey in such a manner, as to compel his co-tenants to take their shares in several distinct parcels, such as he may please. Great Falls Co. v. Worcester, 15 N. H. 412. Even though his deed may bind him by way of estoppel; as against the co-tenants, such deed is inoperative and void. 4 Kent’s Com. 368.
Though tenants in common are, in legal contemplation, all seized of each and every part of the estate, still they are not permitted to do acts which are prejudicial to their co-tenants.
Thus, if two tenants in common be of a wardship of the bodie, and one doth ravish the ward, and one tenant in common release to the ravisher, this shall go in benefit of the other tenant in common, and he shall recover the whole, and this release shall not be any bar to him. And as if two tenants in common be of an advowson, and they bring a quare impedit, and the one doth release, yet the other shall sue forth and recover the whole presentment. 1 Cok. Inst. 197, b.
As one tenant in common cannot convey the entire estate, or the whole of any portion thereof, or give a valid release for injuries done thereto; so too, and for the same reasons, he cannot subject the common property to particular servi-tudes, by which the rights of his co-tenants will be affected. These servitudes, or easements, must be created by the owner, and one tenant in common cannot establish them, upon
Such also is the rule of the civil law. He who has the property of an estate, only in common with others, without any division of the several shares, cannot subject any part of it to a service without the consent of all his co-partners; and any one of them may hinder it, until the estate being divided into shares, every one may impose a service on his own share if he think fit. And likewise he who possesses in common and undivided, a portion of the land or “ tenement to which the service is so due, cannot by himself, free the land or tenement which owes the service; but the service remains for the portions of others. For these services are for every part of the land or tenement to which they are due, and every one of the proprietors has an interest in the service for his own portion.” Domat’s Civil Law, Cushing’s ed. ¶ 1035.
This principle has been applied to the class of cases now under consideration, and it has been decided that one tenant in common has no right, by means of a close erected on other land of which he is sole seized, to flow the land owned in common, without the consent of his co-tenants. It is a wrong to his co-tenants, of the same character, and which allows of similar remedies, as if they had been sole seized. Odiorne v. Lyford, 9 N. H. 502; Great Falls Co. v. Worcester, 15 N. H. 412.
The case of Tucker v. Campbell & al., 36 Maine, 346, has been cited to show, that in a complaint for flowing land owned by tenants in common, by means of a mill-dam, all the co-tenants must join. At the trial, it was evidently supposed that the same principles were involved in this case that were settled by this Court in that. Such however is not the fact. In the case at bar there is no suggestion that the complainant is tenant in common of the land flowed. Of that, he is sole seized. We have already seen that he is not, as was supposed, tenant in common of the right to flow. Therefore the legal objection to the maintenance of the pro
To flow the land owned in common, by one tenant in common, operates as an absolute exclusion of the co-tenant, pro tanto, from the beneficial use of the common estate, for which he would have been entitled to a remedy at common law. In all cases, where applicable, the proceeding by complaint has been substituted by the Legislature of this State, for an action at common law. No practical difficulties being perceived in the way of maintaining this process, we think it cannot be defeated by technical objections.
As the case may be again presented to a jury, it may not be improper to make a suggestion in relation to the deed from Page to Emerson, under which the defendant holds. That deed conveys one undivided half of the land upon which the defendant’s dam is now located, with all the “privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging.” Whether there was then, upon the land conveyed, a mill privilege and dam, by which the land now owned by complainant was flowed, the evidence does not disclose. If such was the case, then the whole right to flow would seem to have been in Emerson at the time he conveyed to Elkins, and to have passed by that deed to Elkins, and through him to the defendant.
Exceptions sustained. —
Verdict set aside and new trial granted.