24 Mich. 279 | Mich. | 1872
The plaintiffs in error, defendants below, were sued to recover for damages to the lands of the plaintiff below, caused by the setting bade of water upon such lands by means of a mill-dam. The dam appears to have been erected by a person through whom the defendants derived title, and the wrong alleged against them consisted in keeping it up aftef they became owners. It seems to have been supposed by the parties .that the dam was originally built, and the land flowed, by permission of the then owner of such land, and a license for its construction and continuance was relied upon as a defense to the action. What the permission was, however, and when and under what circumstances and for what consideration given, we are not informed; and we are consequently wholly in the' dark regarding some important facts which were taken for granted on the argument. What does appear very distinctly is, that the grantor of the defendants for several years occupied by flowing several acres of the land of the plaintiff, paying him therefor a yearly compensation ; that this occupation continued until the defendants bought, and from thence until the bringing of the suit; that the plaintiff thought the compensation too small, and insisted on its being increased, and that various negotiations were had with the defendants on the subject, resulting in no definite understanding. There was evidence, however, from which the jury might be warranted in "find-* ing that the plaintiff had accepted from the defendants, for some years, the usual annual compensation before paid by their grantor, and there was no evidence and no claim that the plaintiff had given to them any notice to terminate their occupancy, except what might be implied from the demand for increased compensation, and from a notification at one time, when the flash boards were gone, that the dam must not be raised again.
The record nevertheless presents for consideration a question of no little importance. It was not disputed on the trial that the plaintiff, for a certain period at least, had received an annual compensation for the flowing of Ms land. The questions in dispute concerned the quantity of land flowed; whether it had been increased since the defendants bought; whether the plaintiff had accepted from them the amount of a certain bill for saAving in satisfaction of damages caused by the flowing for a certain period, and Avhat the measure of damages ought to be, if it should appear that defendants had not established their justification. The defendants insisted that under the facts shown, the relation of landlord and tenant existed between the plaintiff and themselves, and that as his tenants they Avere entitled to notice to quit before they could be treated as wrongdoers; and they requested the circuit judge to charge that “the use by the defendants and their grantors of the dam, and the flowing for a long number of years for an agreed and fixed compensation, constitutes defendants tenants of the plaintiff, and an action cannot be maintained except for the' agreed compensation, without notice to quit.” This request Avas refused, and the judge in effect charged that the plaintiff’s consent to the flowing was a revocable license, and the defendants were liable in this action if they continued the flowing after the license had been revoked.
A license is a permission to do some act or series of acts on the laud of the licensor without having any permanent interest in it. — 8 Kent, 452 ; Cook v. Stearns, 11 Mass., 538; Woodbury v. Parshley, 7 N. H., 237 ; Prince v. Case, 10 Conn., 375; Wolfe v. Frost, 4 Sandf. Ch., 91. It is founded on personal confidence, and therefore not assignable. — 3
There was evidence in the case from which the jury would have been justified in finding that a permanent occupation of a portion of the plaintiff’s land by flowing was
An interest in lands for flowing, is generally a mere easement. An easement is a right which one proprietor has to some profit, benefit or lawful use, out of, or over, the estate of another proprietor. — Ritger v. Parker, 8 Cush., 145 ; Washb. on Easements, 4 It does not displace the general possession by the owner of the land, but the person entitled to the easement has a qualified possession only, so far as maybe needful for its enjoyment.— Washb. on Basements, 8. But there may also be a tenancy in respect to the lands flowed, or to the right to flow. A tenancy exists where one has let real estate to another, to hold of him as landlord. When duly created and the tenant put in possession, he is owner of an estate for the time being, and has all the usual rights and remedies of an owner to defend his possession. But a tenancy does not necessarily imply a right to com
The evidence in the case at bar showed clearly that the flowing by defendants was of a nature to exclude all use of the land by the plaintiff for agricultural purposes. An agreement giving or continuing to them this right, may consequently be fairly supposed to contemplate the giving of an exclusive possession. Whether it was not consistent with this agreement that the plaintiff should retain some right to make use of the same land, we need not consider, since there can be no question that a legal right to flow
It only remains to consider whether the parol agreement, being invalid under the statute of frauds, was good for any purpose. That statute permits leases for a year to be created by parol. It has always been held that a parol lease for more than a year, reserving an annual rent, under which the lessee, has been put in possession, was good as a lease from year to year nntil terminated by notice.— Clayton v. Blakey, 8 T. R., 3 ; People v. Rickert, 8 Cow., 226; McDowell v. Simpson, 3 Watts, 129. We think this ruling applicable to the present, case, and that the defendants were entitled to have the jury instructed in accordance with their request as above given.
For the error of the judge in refusing that request, the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.