5 N.H. 329 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1831
delivered the opinion of the court.
In order to make the case intelligible, it is necessary to state, that it appears by the evidence, that William Morrill formerly owned the mill privileges at Crawley’s falls, on Exeter river in Brentwood. On the north side of the river, at that place, there was a grist-mill, andón the south side, a saw-mill. The respondent is now the owner of the grist-mill and one half of the saw-mill privilege, and the petitioners are the owners of the other half of the saw-mill privilege. The respondent, in 1815, took down the saw-mill and erected a grist-mill partly upon the site of the saw-mill, and no saw-mill has since been erected at the place. The premises, of which the petitioners seek to have a partition, are the water privilege and land belonging to the saw-mill. The land is situate on the south side of the river, and is particularly described by metes and bounds in the petition.
Before we examine the objections, which are now made to the report of the committee, we shall briefly consider the grounds on which such a report stands, the nature of the objections to which it is open, and the proof which ought to be required to sustain the objections.
When a judgment has been rendered on a petition of
But as the committee is appointed by the court, and persons selected, on whose integrity and judgment the court thinks it can safely rely, and against whom neither party can raise any objection, great confidence is placed by the court in the report of the committee ; and it will not be held to be any objection to a report, that witnesses can be found who will testify, that the division is, in their opinion, unjust or inconvenient. To induce the court to set aside the report, the inequality or inconvenience must be clearly and distinctly pointed out and shown to the court by clear and direct evidence. It is much more safe to rely upon the judgment of an impartial committee than upon the opinion of witnesses selected by the parties. Witnesses often take sides with the parties who summon them, and when that is the case, however honest and respectable they may be, very little reliance can be placed upon their testimony, when called to state a mere matter of opinion.
The first objection to the report in this case is, that instead of assigning to the petitioners a just and equal moiety of the land appurtenant to the privilege, the committee have assigned to them nearly all the land.
The evidence adduced to sustain this objection is, the testimony of several witnesses, who swear, that very nearly all the land which they consider as belonging to the saw-mill privilege has been assigned to the petition-
So far as a judgment can be formed upon the subject, from the plans produced by the parties, the respondent seems to have had his due proportion of the premises, described in the petition, assigned to him.
Another objection to the report is, that the committee have left to the respondent no passage to his grist-mill through the land assigned to the petitioners, so that he will not have so convenient a passage to his grist-mill as he has heretofore had. This objection is probably well founded in fact. The passage to the grist-mill will not be, it would seem from the plans, quite as direct as it has been. It was not, however, to be expected, that any just division of the premises would leave him in the enjoyment of a part, and all the advantages and conveniences, which he had, when at liberty to use the whole at his pleasure as a passage. It is not shown, that any other just division could have been made which would have been more convenient to him in this respect ; and we think that until that is done, the report is not to be disturbed on this ground.
Another objection is, that too much water is assigned to the petitioners. There is evidence in the case, which has a tendency to prove, that the petitioners may take by the gates assigned to them water enough to carry a sawmill. But it is proved that the gate of the saw-mill which stood upon this privilege was six feet and two inches in length, and sixteen inches in width, and the committee have assigned to each of the petitioners a gate eighteen inches in length and sixteen inches in width. This seems to be a just division of the water privilege. The privilege, of which the petitioners are entitled to a division is, not of water enough to carry a saw-mill, but of the water which belonged to the sawmill privilege of which they claim to have partition.
An attempt has been made in this ease to show that the saw-mill was not used in the summer season. But admitting the fact to have been so, it is wholly immaterial. The grist-mill privilege and the saw-mill privilege, both belonged to the same person, whose title these parties now have, without any restriction, so far as appears as to the use pf the water. In whatever manner the original owner may have used the water, the owners of the saw-mill privilege have now a right to use the water at their pleasure, unless limited by the conveyances
Report accepted.