53 Ill. 19 | Ill. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from the equity side of the circuit court of Warren county. The bill was for an injunction, to restrain defendants, appellees here, from cutting a ditch or race from their mill to carry off the water from the wheel, on the allegation that the same was about to be cut on complainant’s land, and would work irreparable injury to him.
The defendants answered the bill, denying the race was to be cut on complainant’s land, and claiming ownership of the land in themselves, and also claiming certain privileges in the laud of complainant, granted to A. H. Rockwell, one of the defendants, by the deed of complainant.
The cause was heard on the bill, answer, replication and proofs, and a decree passed, dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill, and this is the error assigned.
The important point made on this appeal is, that the land through which the ditch was cut was the property of complainant ; that his east line was the centre thread of Cedar creek, and the ditch was cut in the middle of the creek, and through an island below the mill.
It appears the complainant and A. H. Rockwell, one of the defendants, are brothers, being the sons of Lovet P. Rockwell, deceased, who, in his life time, was the owner of several tracts of land, and among them the tract in question. A partition of the lands was made by the heirs after his death, effected by deeds of conveyance executed by them. On the tract conveyed by complainant, as one of the heirs-at-law of his father, to A. H. Rockwell, defendant, there was a water mill, and a clause was inserted in the conveyance, to this effect: “giving to the party of the second part the right and title to all the mill privileges on said quarter,” &c.; and in the deed from A. H. Rockwell to complainant, the tract of land about which this proceeding originated, is described as' follows: “ Commencing at the southeast corner of the lot deeded by A. J. and Alfred H. Rockwell to Mary E. Rockwell, of date February 4, 1862, thence east along the line of the public road leading along the south line of said lot, down the hill to the west side of Cedar creek, thence down the west line of said creek to the north line of said quarter section, thence west on the north line of said quarter to the northeast corner of said first described lot, thence south along the east line of said lot to the place of beginning.”
It is claimed by appellant, that, by these courses and this description, his east line was the middle thread of Cedar creek.
■ It is a familiar principle, that the proprietor of land situated on a river or stream of water not navigable, is presumed to own to the centre thread of the stream. It is, however, but a presumption, for one man may own the bed of such a stream and another may own the banks, and where, in a deed conveying land, the boundary is limited to the bank of the stream instead of bounding it on or along the stream, the presumption must fail. The party must be controlled by the terms of his deed.
As was said by Pakkek, chief justice, in Hatch v. Dwight, 17 Mass. 298, where land was bounded by the bank of a stream, it necessarily excluded the stream itself, and an owmer may sell the land without the privilege of the stream, as he will do if he bounds his grant by the bank. This case wras approved by the court of errors of the State of Mew York, and the case of Child v. Starr, decided in conformity thereto. 4 Hill, 369. We concur in the reasoning and conclusion reached in those cases, and, in doing so, only reiterate a familiar principle, that every express grant, as this was, fixes its own limits, and determines the rights of the parties under it. And in this case, there are forcible reasons why no portion of the bed of the creek was intended to be included in the grant to complainant, for the reason that on the land he ■granted to the defendant, Rockwell, a mill was erected, which might require the exclusive use of the bed of the creek, and it is not reasonable to suppose that he would grant away its use without express words, showing such intention. The success of the mill depended very much on the free and uninterrupted flow of the water belowithe dam, and to insure that, it was essential the bed of the stream should be his own, exclusively, and which he has retained by limiting his grant to complainant to the west bank of the creek.
This being the situation of these parties, the defendant, Rockwell, being the owner of the bed of the stream, had the right to cut a race or ditch through it, to carry off the surplus water from the mill, and, in so doing, he has not encroached upon any right existing in complainant. The excavation made is east of complainant’s east line, and the clear preponderance of the evidence shows that, in no particular is complainant injured by it, while it is shown, most conclusively, that the ditch was necessary for the preservation of the mill and its privileges. We have chosen to consider the case on its merits, as they were all before the court in pronouncing the decree, and not upon the subordinate points presented by the briefs of counsel.
We concur with the circuit court in the opinion dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill, no invasion of the rights of complainant appearing, and no injury resulting to him from the acts of the defendants, of which he can complain.
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.