2 Doug. 16 | Mich. | 1845
delivered the opinion of the court.
I have examined with much care the various questions presented by the case upon the pleadings and testimony and will proceed to state the conclusion at which I have arrived.
The principal questions are, 1. What is the construction of the instrument executed by complainant, granting the water power to Hurd, without the addition made to it ? 2. What with that addition? and, 3. If the addition varies the construction of the original instrument, is it, in respect to the defendant, a subsisting and valid part of it?
The defendant, Showerman, insists that, by the terms of the lease, the water granted to the lessee was to be measured', not by an aperture to be inserted in a gate at the race or dam, from which it was to be transferred to the iron works of the lessee, but that it should be measured, as stated in his answer, on the wheel; that the words in the lease, “as much water as will run through an aperture of two feet square, under a head of four feet from the top of said aperture,” contemplate the quantity of water, ascertainable by calculation, which will flow through an aperture of the size mentioned, under the pressure of the head mentioned, into open space, without the obstruction of any flume or channel conducting it to the machinery to be propelled by it; that he has the right to that definite quantity of water, to be applied on the wheels of the machinery ; — in other words, that he is entitled to a definite quantity of water, independent of the mode of taking
The first question which presents itself, is, which of these two constructions of the lease is the true one. The great end in construing instruments is to ascertain what was the actual intention of the parties, and it is the object of courts of law and equity to enforce them according to such intention. To ascertain the true meaning and intention of the parties, it has been long a well settled rule, that the whole instrument is to be examined, and every part taken into consideration. As was said by Chief Justice Hobart, in the case cited by Lord Ellenborough, in Howell v. Richards, 11 East, 643, “Every deed is to be construed according to the intention of the parties, and the intents ought to be adjudged of the several parts of the deed, as a general issue out of the evidence: and the intent ought to be picked out of every part, and not out of one word only.” This general principle is found in all cases on this subject, ancient and modern, and the soundness of the rule I think cannot be questioned.
It is also a further well settled rule, that in the construction of contracts, the situation of the parties, and the subject matter of their transactions to which the contract relates, may be taken into consideration in determining the meaning of any particular sentence or provision. Wilson v. Troup, 2 Cow. 228.
Let us apply these principles to the construction of the instrument under consideration. The complainant was in
When we take into consideration the quantity of water the defendant would have by his mode of interpreting the gz'ant, (one of the witnesses stating that it would take ten-sixteenths of the whole, and the others, genez'ally, that it would give enough to cany six or seven z'un of mill stones in a grist mill,) we can hardly presume the parties intended that such a quantity should be drawn from the side of complainant’s race, which he was making to conduct the water to his own mill. The whole language, howevez-, taken together, seems to me to indicate the other construction.
As to the evidence tending to show the large quantity of water defendant’s interpz-etation would give, it is insisted by the counsel for defendant, that the fact is not averred in the bill and made the ground of relief, and that the evidence is therefore irrelevant. This position would undoubtedly be correct if it were made a ground of z-elief on the score of mistake, or other equitable consideration. But here it is introduced to show the situation of the subject matter to which the contract refers, and the consequent effect of one of the two different constructions contended for.
When the addition to the lease, — “it is further agreed that the water is to be measured at the head gates,” — is taken in connection with it, the construction above regarded as the correct one, is still more apparent; though, from the construction which appears to me to be the correct one of the original lease, this is unimportant. It is contended
It is said that the chancellor should, by his decree, have enjoined the defendant from using an excess of water, instead of directing the gates and aperture guaged and inserted. But I think the decree in this respect unobjectionable, and sanctioned by the case of Arthur v. Case, 1 Paige, 448, on the authority of Martin v. Sherman, Mosely, 144.
The defendant’s counsel also complains that, by the decree, the gates and aperture, &c. are required to be put in at the defendant’s expense. I see nothing wrong in this. Me, under the agreement, must draw the water from the pond, for his own benefit, and of course at his own expense. He was requested to put in gates and take only the water that was his under it. According to the construction we deem the true one, he was taking more. He should have complied with the request. That it should be done under the direction of a master was rendered necessary by bis course.
The case is of a novel character in our courts, and has been argued with much zeal and ability. After full and careful consideration of the questions presented, I have come to the conclusion that the decree of the chancellor must be affirmed. And such is the opinion of the court.
Decree affirmed.