2 Ind. 257 | Ind. | 1850
Richard Moore brought an action on the case against Daniel Sinks, complaining of the obstruction of an artificial water course. He alleged, in his declaration, that, on the 20th day of September, 1845, he possessed, and that he had ever since possessed, a certain piece of ground, being about half an acre, of which he set out the particular boundaries, and on which he averred there was, on said 20th day of September, “arid had been ever since, and still was, a tannery, and a bark-mill used for grinding bark for said tannery, to which a certain quantity of water, sufficient to' work said bark-mill on the premises aforesaid, was accustomed to flow from a certain mill-race, running near said bark-mill to a flouring-mill formerly belonging to one Jacob Sinks, and which water was an appurtenance to said bark-mill and the premises on which it was situated,” &c., and that the defendant, on the 10th day of September, 1846, filled up the channel in which the water was accustomed to flow to the bark-mill, &c.-
Plea — not guilty. Trial by jury. Yerdict for the defendant. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.
The evidence is upon the record and establishes the following facts:
In the latter part of the year 1842, Jacob Sinks, for the consideration of 50 dollars, verbally sold to the plaintiff the ground in the declaration mentioned. The plaintiff immediately took possession and put upon said ground a tan-yard, and, soon afterwards, a bark-mill. Said piece
In order to determine whether the plaintiff sustained an injury from the act of the defendant, it is necessary that we first ascertain the nature and extent of the plaintiff’s right to take water from the defendant’s mill-race. In doing this we shall lay out of view the deed of confirmation by Daniel Sinks and others to the plaintiff, as that deed was not intended to confer any rights beyond those supposed to have been conveyed by the deed of Jacob Sinks, to the consideration of which deed we proceed.
That deed, as we have said, made no mention of a mill or a right to take water from the defendant’s race, and by its terms, therefore, did not purport to convey any such right. Hence the plaintiff was driven to the necessity of resorting to evidence dehors the deed to show himself entitled to so take water to any extent. He had a right to resort to such evidence, and would be entitled to exercise whatever right it established in him.
The right claimed by the plaintiff in this case is an easement upon the land and water of the defendant, an incorporeal hereditament lying, according to the common law, only in grant, and which can be evidenced only by a deed or by prescription — evidence of a deed. See the cases collected in the third chapter of the American edition of Gale and Whately on Easements, and the luminous opinion of Baron Alder son in Wood v. Leadbelter, 13 Mand. W. 837. An easement may be shown by such evidence to have become an appurtenance to land other than that upon which it is enjoyed; but there was not such evidence in this case.
It may be regarded as doubtful, therefore, whether the plaintiff established a right to the use of any water from the defendant’s race. There are, we admit, cases which modify the general principle above laid down as to the
But it would be out of place for us here to enter upon a review of the class of cases of which we are now speaking, with the purpose of distinguishing this case from them; for, conceding, for the sake of the argument, that the plaintiff did show that the right to take water from the defendant’s race was an appurtenance to his bark-mill and the ground on which it stood, still, as the deed of conveyance did not define the extent of that right, we are compelled to look to the parol evidence in the case to ascertain it, and by that evidence it appears that that right, in no event, extended beyond the taking of water not wanted for the running of the flouring-mill, and the evidence does not show that the right was ever obstructed. In no view of the case, therefore, would the plaintiff recover.
The judgment is affirmed with costs.