193 Mass. 152 | Mass. | 1906
On Millers River in the town of Winchendon, within a distance of less than two miles, are six mill privileges, each occupied for manufacturing purposes. Altogether they have a head and fall for the use of water power on their several wheels, which amounts to ninety-eight and one half feet. The defendant owns the upper privilege, each of the parties plaintiff owns one of the others, and one is owned by persons who are not connected with this suit. The defendant’s mills
For a long time previous to June, 1899, the usual hours for operating all of these establishments were from 7 A. M. to 6 P. M., with an hour’s interval at noon. At an earlier period the mills ran eleven hours, and in all the years, from time to time when . business was pressing, they were operated overtime during a part of the hours of the night. Since June, 1899, the defendant has used one of his two wheels ten hours per day for his machine shop, and the other, for a considerable part of each night, in producing electricity for lighting the town of Winchendon. From lack of storage capacity in their ponds, much of the water used for this latter purpose has not been utilized by the plaintiffs, and they have not been able to have the entire flow of the stream for twenty-four hours come to their wheels during the ten hours which constitute their ordinary working day. This bill is brought to recover for their loss, and to obtain an injunction against a continuance by the defendant of this use.
This is a mistaken view of the law. In the absence of any prescriptive rights, the plaintiffs have no greater right against the defendant, in reference to his use of the stream, than they would have if his mills and dams and'reservoir and their mills and dams had been built and used but a single month. In the latter ease each would have a right to a reasonable use of the water. In determining what is reasonable for each of the parties, the nature of the stream and of the several mill privileges, its adaptability to different modes of use, the wants of the community, the custom and usage of people in the neighborhood and elsewhere in regard to the management of business, the hours of labor and the use of the water of such streams, would all be proper matters for consideration as evidence. Tourtellot
So, too, the rights of these plaintiffs are not enlarged by their suing jointly. The question as to each is whether the defendant is using the water unreasonably to his detriment. If the defendant were not using it at all — if he and one or two proprietors farther up should abandon their mills and take away their dams and open their reservoirs, so that the water would come down to the plaintiffs’ mills in its natural flow, in the same quantity in all parts of each day of twenty-four hours — it seems very plain that the plaintiffs would have no legal ground of complaint, although they would be able to use on their wheels, during each working day of ten hours, very much less water than they use now.
The question of chief difficulty in the case is: How far is it reasonable for á mill owner on such a stream to use the water in the night-time, for a legitimate business which calls for power
The primary right of every riparian proprietor is to have the natural and customary flow of the stream, without obstruction or change. This primary right is modified by the right of every proprietor to make a reasonable use of the water, which leaves the lower proprietor the natural flow, changed, so far as it may be, by such previous use on the stream above. If such use makes the flow more advantageous for the lower proprietor than the flow in its strictly natural state, he gets the benefit of it, as an incident of his ownership, which he may enjoy while it lasts, but not as permanent property that he can control for the future. The fact that a reasonable use by an upper proprietor leaves the flow more beneficial than the strictly natural flow to those on the stream below, may well be considered as a circumstance, so long as the condition remains, in determining what is a reasonable use for an intermediate proprietor, in reference to those farther down. In this way a reservoir, reasonably constructed and used in connection with a stream, may so far affect the stream below as properly to be taken into account in passing upon the conduct of lower riparian proprietors.
We have been referred to no adjudication, and after searching we have found none, that determines how far a proprietor, under a claim of a reasonable use, may change the natural flow of a stream by appropriating its waters in the night-time and holding them back in the daytime. In Barrett v. Parsons, 10 Cush.
Inasmuch as the use of the defendant’s reservoir on the stream above is a part of his use of the stream at his mills for his own convenience, we think his entire use at the mills and at the reservoir should be considered together, in its effect upon the natural flow to the plaintiffs below, in determining the limits of the defendant’s rights. That part of his use which is detrimental and that part which is beneficial to the plaintiffs, when taken together, will show how far he can go in the use of the water without invading their rights. Elliot v. Fitchburg Railroad, 10 Cush. 191, 197.
It is unnecessary to consider in detail the numerous exceptions that were taken. The principles above stated will enable the parties to determinate their rights.
Decree reversed; ease to stand for further hearing.