Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Obenchain

107 Va. 596 | Va. | 1907

Harrison J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This hill in chancery was filed by the appellee, D. C. Obenchain, against the appellant and J ames Mundy, to have restored a certain water right alleged to have been obstructed by a wide and high fill made by the Norfolk & Western Railway Company over the route of the race and trunk, formerly used in conducting the water over the right of way granted by J. J. Echols to the Shenandoah Yalley Railroad Company in August, 1881. The complainant claims that he owns this water right, and is entitled to have it flow from its source, unobstructed, to his foundry and machine shops;. and that he has acquired this right under his purchase of this property from Iris grantor and her predecessors in title.

By decree of September, 1905, a demurrer to the bill by James Mundy, was sustained, and the bill dismissed as to him; and in June, 1906, the cause was considered on its merits, upon the proceedings had therein, and a decree entered, holding that the complainant was entitled to the water right in question as appurtenant to his foundry and machine shop lot; and the court, not being then advised as to the best method of affording the complainant relief, recommitted the cause to its master commissioner, who was directed to inquire and report whether the defendant railway company should be required unconditionally to remove the obstruction, or whether it should be required to provide a passageway for the water through its fill, and, if the latter, to locate the point at which such passageway should be constructed and the size of the same. Erom l)oth of these decrees, this appeal has been taken.

We are of opinion that the circuit court committed no error *598in sustaining the demurrer of James Mundy and dismissing the bill as to him.

The only reference to James Mundy in the bill is that, by his deed of April 30, 1901, he had attempted and pretended to-convey the water right in question to the appellant company,. - charging that Mundy did not own such water right, and that the railway company, therefore, acquired no rights under such pretended deed, which was void. The bill charged that the water right had been obstructed by the 1ST. & W. Ey. . Co. making a fill across the water course. It does not charge that Mundy had obstructed the water right; that he owned any land through which the water would run; or that he had any control over, or right to, the water. It does not allege that Mundy can or should • be required to restore such water right if the complainant is entitled to it. Eo relief is prayed against Mundy, the prayer of the bill being that the appellant railway company be required to remove the fill, or that it be required to-pay a money compensation in lieu of such removal, and that it be enjoined from further interfering with the flow of the water. There is no issue made by the pleadings between Mundy and the appellant railway company. The answer of the appellant was not filed as a cross bill, and Mundy was not made a party to it, and was not required to take any notice of its allegations. If it be claimed that Mundy is under a liability to the railroad company by reason of his deed of April 30, 1901, he is entitled to be properly impleaded by the company before a hearing of the controversy, in which controversy, so far as this record, shows, the appellee, Obenchain, appears to have no interest.

We are further of opinion that there is no error in the decree of June, 1906, holding that the appellee, D. O. Obenchain, is entitled to the water right in question.

The record shows that in the year 1873 the property in controversy, together with other property, was sold and conveyed to one J. J. Echols by L. Linkenhoker, a special commissioner *599of the court. This deed from Linkenhoker, commissioner, to Echols conveys the water right in controversy to Echols, and by the citations it contains shows that, for many years prior thereto, this water right was recognized and reserved in the deeds conveying this foundry and machine shop property. In. August, 1881, J. J. Echols granted and conveyed to the Shenandoah Valley Bailroad Company, the predecessor in title to the appellant, a right of way for its railroad through these lands. In this deed, the grantor expressly reserved the right to have this water continue to flow uninterruptedly to his foundry and machine shops, and the Shenandoah Valley Bailroad Company covenanted to so protect such water-way over the land conveyed to it as not to diminish the flow or affect the fall of the water in its passage to the machine shops. Subsequently, in October, 1881, Echols conveyed the foundry and machine shop lot, as to which he had reserved the water right in his deed to the Shenandoah Valley Bailroad Company, to James Mundy, making special reference to the Linkenhoker deed as the source of his title and for a particular description of the property he was then conveying. In October, 1890, JamesMundy conveyed all of his right, title, claim and interest, of whatever kind, in the controverted property to the Biverside Land Company, and it has passed, with its Appurtenances, from that company through several alienations to the appellee, Obenchain, whose deed from Emma J. McLaughlin is dated February 26, 1902.

In April, 1901, the appellant railway company, the successor in title to the Shenandoah Valley Bailroad Company, desiring to do away with the trestle then in use and to substitute the fill complained of across the water way, obtained from James Mundy, who had theretofore parted with the property, a deed reciting the covenant of the Shenandoah Valley Bail-road Company, to protect the water right, and releasing the appellant from all obligation with respect to such water right, *600and authorizing it to'fill up the space over the waterway theretofore spanned by the trestle.

The contention of the appellant is, that there is no express ¿rant of the water right in the deed of October, 1890, from James Mundy to the Riverside Land Co., and nothing therein to indicate an intention to convey any water right; that the foundry and machine shops were then in a state of decay; and that the Riverside Land Co. bought the property to be divided up into town lots, which was done and the plat thereof recorded.

Mundy conveyed to the Riverside Land Co. all of his right, title and claim, of whatever hind, in and to the controverted\ property; among these rights which he owned was the water right in question, which had been conveyed to him by Echols, and the preservation and protection of which had been expressly guaranteed to the property by the recorded covenant of the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company, before Mundy became the owner. It is true that the water right was not specifically mentioned in the deed from Mundy to the Riverside Company, but it was not reserved or excepted from that grant, and hence the easement passed from the grantor, as an appurtenance passing with the land, as fully as the buildings or •other rights appurtaining thereto. •

The code provides that, “Every deed conveying land shall, unless an exception be made therein, be construed to include all Luildings, privileges, and appurtenances of every kind belonging to the lands therein embraced.” Code, 1904, sec. 2443.

This right of easement originated by express grant, and is ¡shown to be reasonably necessary to the beneficial enjoyment <of the property in question, to which it is an appurtenance. Its preservation as an important appurtenance to the property was •carefully guarded and protected when the right of way was •granted to the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company, and it lhas passed without qualification or reservation as a property right from those who originally created it, through successive *601owners, to the appellee, D. C. Obenchain. As late as April, 1901, the appellant, in changing its track from a trestle to a fill, recognized the existence of this water right and its value by attempting to buy it from James Mundy, and to obtain from Mm a release of the obligation it was under, by reason of the covenant of its predeceessor, to preserve and protect the same. It is true, as contended, that this property has for a long time been in a dilapidated condition, and that the water right in controversy has not been used for a number of years; but the mere nonuser of an easement which has been created by grant does not extinguish it, or show that it has been abandoned. Angelí on Water Courses, sec. 252.

In Watts v. Johnson R. E. Corp. 105 Va. 519, 525, 54 S. E. 317, 319, it is said, citing numerous authorities: “The doctrine, too, is well settled, that mere nonuser of an easement created by deed for a period, however long, will not amount to abandonment. To show this there must be acts of the owner showing an intention to abandon, or an adverse user by the owner of the servient estate, acquiesced in by the owner of the dominant estate. Nothing short of a user by the owner of the servient estate, which is adverse to the enjoyment of the easement by the owner thereof, for a period sufficient to create a prescriptive right, will destroy the right granted.”

The record in the case at bar does not justify the conclusion that the appellee, Obenchain, has abandoned the water right in controversy, or that it was ever abandoned by those under whom he claims.

Eor these reasons, the decrees complained of must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

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