4 Watts 317 | Pa. | 1835
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
—M’Kellip, the plaintiff in error, was the defendant below, and it appears from the evidence that he and the plaintiff below severally owned a tract or parcel of land, adjoining to each other, lying on a stream of water called Pine Run, which runs through both tracts. The land belonging to the plaintiff below lies above that of the defendant on the stream. These parcels of land were purchased originally from the state by an association of persons known and called by the name of the Holland Land Company. The legal title for that part of the plaintiff’s land in which he alleges he has been injured by the acts and conduct of the defendant, as also for the whole of the defendant’s land, was at one time vested in Paul Busti, in trust for the company, for whom he acted as a general agent, and was known for many years to exercise unlimited
The first error assigned is, that the court below erred in rejecting the evidence offered by the defendant as set forth in the various bills of exception, amounting to eleven in number.
As to the first, the defendant—after having given evidence showing that the attorneys of the plaintiff had in their possession certain articles of agreement made between Benjamin B. Cooper by his attorney in fact David Lawson of the first part, and James Brady of the second part, whereby the first, as it is alleged, sold to the latter the land in which the plaintiff complains he was injured, which articles, by indorsement made in writing on the back thereof, were assigned by Brady, together with his interest in the land thereby agreed to be sold, to the plaintiff; and having shown, likewise, that a notice had been served on the plaintiff a reasonable time, beforehand, to produce the articles of agreement with the indorsement thereon upon the trial of the cause, who declined to produce the same—offered to give parol evidence of the execution and contents thereof: to which the plaintiff’s counsel objected, and the court overruled the evidence. It does not a'ppear upon what ground it was that the court rejected this evidence, nor can I form even a conjecture of it. In connexion with the other evidence offered to be given on the part of the defendant, it was certainly very material to the issue, and the defendant unquestionably showed that he had done all that the law required of him to entitle him to give the secondary evidence offered. It was proved distinctly that the originals, which were doubtless the best
The second bill of exception was to the opinion of the court in rejecting a letter-of attorney from Paul Busti to Daniel Lawson, dated the 19th of August 1811. If this were the only error assigned in the case, I am not satisfied that the judgment of the court below ought to be reversed on account of it, for I am not able to discover clearly that it could have had any material bearing on the cause: still, as Paul Busti appears to have been invested with the legal title to the land of both parties, and was known to exercise all the power over the lands of the Holland Company that ownership itself could give, at the date of this letter of attorney; it might have had a very important bearing on the cause, if Lawson had under it given to the defendant leave to build his mill-dam originally in the manner he did. This, however, does not appear from the paper book to have been the purpose for which it was offered; nor does it appear distinctly for what end it was proposed to be read in evidence; and therefore we cannot say there was error in rejecting it.
The third bill of exception was to the opinion of the court in rejecting the letter of attorney of Benjamin B. Cooper to David Lawson. If the execution of this letter of attorney was eit her offered to be proved by the defendant’s counsel, or admitted by the plaintiff or his counsel, the court below ought to have admitted it to be read in evidence; because it would have shown David Lawson’s authority as the attorney in fact of Benjamin B. Cooper, for encouraging the defendant to go on and expend money in improving and maintaining his mill and dam.
The fourth bill of exception was for rejecting the defendant’s offer to prove by David Lawson that he never had any other power of attorney emanating from the Holland Land Company than the one from Paul Busti. Not being able to perceive the relevancy of this evidence to the issue, we cannot say that the court erred in rejecting it.
The fifth bill of exception is to the rejection of the defendant’s offer to prove by David Lawson that he, as the attorney in fact of Benjamin B. Cooper, within a year after the date of the deed from Paul Busti to
The sixth bill of exception is to the opinion of the court in refusing to permit the defendant to prove that Hiram Jan Huidekoper, was the known, notorious and acknowledged agent of the Holland Land Company, and especially for the land on which the plaintiff alleged the nuisance was created ; and that as such he granted to the defendant the privilege of erecting the dam and flowing back the water in the manner he has done, and that the grant was made by Huidekoper in the year 1812 or 1813, before the defendant built his dam or mill; and as a further inducement to the defendant to erect his mill, that Huidekoper proposed and promised to release
And as to the second question involved in this exception, whether the license, being merely oral, was good and available or not, it was laid down by Houghton, justice, in Webb v. Pater Noster, Palm. 74, S. C., 2 Roll. Rep. 143, 152; Poph. 151, that such license, as long as it remains unexecuted, is countermandable, but otherwise when executed; it becomes binding then on the party granting it. And this doctrine is fully sustained and confirmed by the case of Winter v. Brockwell, 8 East 309, 310, where a parol license to erect a skylight over the defendant’s area, which impeded the light and air
The eighth and ninth bills of exception present the same question, and one which, among others, seems to have been decide4 in the case of Strickler v. Todd, 10 Serg. & Rawle 73, 74. There it was ruled that the declarations and admissions of those under whom the defendant claimed title to his land, made while they respectively were the owners of the land through which the stream of water ran that the defendant claimed to have the privilege of using for his mill without any diminution or obstruction in the course thereof by the plaintiff within the boundaries of his land, tending to show that the privilege had been granted, were admissible. Why then were not the declarations and admissions of M’llhenny the plaintiff, that M’Kellip the defendant had the grant of a right and privilege to erect his dam and to cause the water to overflow the plaintiff’s land, as he has done, admissible to establish the defendant’s right to do so? Most clearly they were, because, if true, of which the jury and not the court were to judge, they went to prove that the defendant had a license or right granted to him, at least by word of mouth, if not by deed or writing, either of which, when executed, has been shown to be sufficient not only to justify him in erecting his dam for the use of his mill as he did, but to entitle him to the full benefit and enjoyment of it afterwards. The testimony of Corbet is also to this effect, but seems to have been admitted without objection, otherwise, it is probable, it would have been rejected upon the same ground with that mentioned in this bill of exception. The court in their charge to the jury notice the testimony given by Corbet on this point, and in or4er, as it appears to me, to repel the natural effect of it, have given rather a strange turn to it, by saying that “the plaintiff may have been led to believe in such gift or license by the allegations of the defendant or other persons.” Now it does not appear from the evidence that the plaintiff ever pretended that he had gotten his information or knowledge of the grant of the privilege to the defendant from such a source ; and why the court should have suggested it to the jury, without any thing to warrant it, I cannot imagine: but I can readily perceive that it might have prevented the evidence from producing -the effect upon the minds of the jury which it ought to have done, if they believed that such declarations and admissions had been made by the plaintiff.
We are also of opinion that the testimony mentioned in the tenth and eleventh bills of exception was admissible, and that the court erred in rejecting it. It is of a character similar to that set forth in the eighth and ninth bills of exception ; not only tending to prove, by the declarations and admissions of the plaintiff, the grant of the privilege to the defendant, but going to prove a formal agreement made
The second error assigned is, that the court erred in charging the jury “that the presumption only commenced from the time the plaintiff took possession, to wit fifteen or sixteen years before the suit brought.” The words of the charge here alluded to are: “ it appears also that the plaintiff entered on his place two or three years after (meaning after defendant built his dam, in 1814), that is to say, fifteen or sixteen years before the suit, and to that extent, he may be considered to have acquiesced in the right of the defendant to the privilege he claims to overflowing the land of the plaintiff by the dam in question.” Now if the court meant to convey to the jury the idea that the acquiescence of those of whom the plaintiff bought the land, before he purchased, in the defendant’s building his dam and using the water of the stream as he did, was not to be regarded as having any effect upon the plaintiff; or, in other words, that the plaintiff’s own personal acquiescence, after he acquired an interest in the land, could alone bind him, they were wrong: because if the owners of the plaintiff’s land, at the time the defendant built his dam acquiesced in his doing so, and continued their acquiescence as long as they remained the owners of it, the plaintiff ought to be considered as buying the land subject to such acquiescence ; and if it were to be continued for the space of twenty years, it would give to the defendant the same right to continue in the enjoyment of his dam as he had constructed it, that it would have done had the plaintiff been the owner of the land during the whole period. The occupation and enjoyment of such a privilege as that claimed by the defendant, acquiesced in for the space of twenty years, by the different succeeding owners of the land out of which the privilege is claimed, though there should be twenty of them in number, and no one of them had been owner of the land more than one year, will raise a presumption in favour of the right to enjoy it, just as strong and conclusive as if but one of them had been the owner of the land during the whole of the twenty years.
We do not think that the third error assigned is sustained : nor can we say that the fourth is. They rather relate to the opinion of the court in regard to the effect and the weight of the evidence as it tended to prove one state of things or the other ; but still the court seem to have left the facts to be determined by the jury as they should weigh the evidence.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.