100 N.Y. 471 | NY | 1885
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *473
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *474 On the 25th day of March, 1875, the defendant conveyed to the plaintiffs a parcel of land situate in Franklin county, described in the deed as follows: "Commencing at a point forty rods south and forty rods east from the north-west corner of said lot No. 44, in the east line of a forty-acre lot formerly owned by Philip Bryant, and at the south-west corner of land formerely owned by George W. Douglass, running from thence south in the east line of the Bryant lot to the land leased or owned by the Northern Railroad Company; thence east in the north line of said railroad to the west bounds of land formerly owned by John Mitchell and now owned by Henry Mitchell; thence northerly in said Mitchell's line to the bridge or highway; thence westerly in the center of the highway until it strikes the line dividing the land of C.J. Morgan from that of the party of the first part; thence westerly along said line to the place of beginning, being all of the land owned by the party of the first part south of the highway and up to the north line of the railroad, excepting and reserving the old *476 house now standing on said land in the sand bank west of the river, with the appurtenances, and all the estate, title and interest therein of the said parties of the first part." The deed contained a covenant in the following language: "And the said Eli B. Smith does hereby covenant and agree to and with the said parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns, that the premises thus conveyed in the quite and peaceable possession of the said parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns, he will forever warrant and defend against any party whomsoever lawfully claiming the same or any part thereof." It is alleged in the complaint that the parcel of land described contained a grist and flouring-mill with the water power and mill privileges appurtenant; that it was known as the John Bush Grist and Flouring-Mill property and had been used in connection with the water power afforded by the river mentioned in the deed as a grist and flouring-mill for many years; that its value consisted almost wholly in its use for that purpose; that the plaintiffs have not been permitted peaceably to occupy and enjoy the premises or the mill property, privileges and water power, but that, on the contrary, one Douglass at the time of the conveyance was the lawful owner of a certain mill-dam in the river below the premises conveyed to the plaintiffs and of the right to raise the height of such dam eight and one-half inches above the height at which it was maintained at the time of the conveyance to the plaintiffs, and that having such right he did raise his dam to such height and did thereby cause the water of the river to set back upon the premises conveyed to the plaintiffs, and to flood a portion thereof, and to impede the discharge of water from their wheel-pit and race-way, and the operation of their mill, and did thus evict them from a portion of their premises, deprive them of the use and enjoyment thereof, and cause them other damage; and it is also alleged that after due notice to the defendant, and with his approval, in order to test the right of Douglass so to raise his dam, the plaintiffs brought an action against him, in which he established his right so to raise and maintain the dam.
By his demurrer to the complaint the defendant admitted all *477 these allegations of fact, and the sole question for our determination is, whether the facts alleged showed a breach of the covenant contained in defendant's deed, his contention being that the facts failed to show such an eviction from the premises conveyed, or some portion thereof, as was absolutely essential to the maintenance of the action.
There can be no dispute that the covenant for quiet enjoyment can be broken only by an eviction, actual or constructive, from the premises conveyed, or some portion thereof. This is not a mere technical rule, having no foundation in principle or justice, but it has its foundation in the reason that the covenantee, who has obtained possession, should not be permitted to recover for breach of the covenant for a mere failure or defect of title, so long as he is left in possession, as he may never be disturbed and thus never suffer damage. The covenantor should, therefore, be held liable, not only in all cases coming technically within the letter of the rule, but also in all cases falling really within its reason. It has, therefore, been held that where the covenantee has not been able to obtain the possession of the premises conveyed on account of a paramount outstanding title, and thus has in fact never been ousted from the possession, he may yet maintain an action for the breach of the covenant. (Shattuck v. Lamb,
In this case Douglass had a paramount right to an easement to set back the water of the river and to flood the land conveyed, and in the exercise of that right he did cause a portion of the land conveyed to be flooded and covered with water, and of such land the plaintiff was deprived of the use, and really *478
and practically of the possession, and thus there was substantially an eviction. Suppose Douglass, in the exercise of an easement owned by him, had flooded the whole of plaintiffs' land to the depth of one foot or ten feet, thus destroying the water power and depriving the plaintiffs of any beneficial use or possession of the land, could it be maintained that there had been no eviction, and, therefore, no breach of the covenant for quiet enjoyment? To hold that it could would be to disregard the reason of the rule, and to sacrifice substance for the mere form of words in which the rule is generally expressed. So far as one permanently floods the land of another there is a physical invasion of the land and a practical ouster of the possession thereof; and in a real sense such land is taken from the owner, and so it has been held. (Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co., 13 Wall. 166; Eaton v. R.R. Co.,
Our argument may receive some re-enforcement also from the history of real estate law. Anciently, by the feudal constitution, if the vassal's title to the fee which he had received at the hands of his lord, and for which he was to render certain duties, failed, he had the right to call upon his lord in a proper form of action for other land of equal value. The modern personal covenants contained in deeds, which are not more than two hundred years old, are a substitute for this ancient right. Now, instead of other lands, the grantee recovers upon his covenants damages for the land from which he was ousted or to which his title fails. Suppose some feudal lord had given to his vassal land which another person subsequently flooded under a paramount right, can it be doubted that the lord could have been compelled to give other land of equal value? And so now, instead of land, the grantor should upon his covenant of warranty be compelled to give damages.
We think, therefore, that so far as Douglass, under paramount right, invaded the land conveyed to the plaintiffs and flooded the same with water, there was an eviction sufficient for the maintenance of this action.
But there is still another view which may be taken of this *479 case. Every owner of land through which a natural stream of water flows has the right to have it flow from his land unobstructed in its natural channel, unless such right has been curtailed by grant or adverse possession. This is said to be a natural rightpublici juris. The learned counsel for the defendant contends that this right rests upon an easement which an upper owner upon a stream has in the lands below him for the passage of the water over such lands in its natural channel, and his contention has some authority for its support. (Cary v. Daniels, 5 Metc. 236; Prescott v. Williams, id. 429.) Such rights have some semblance to easements, and no harm or inconvenience can probably come from classifying them as such for some purposes. But they are not in fact real easements. Every easement is supposed to have its origin in grant or prescription which presupposes a grant, and it is quite absurd to suppose that the owner of land at the head of a stream has an easement by grant or prescription for its flow over all the land of the riparian owners for many miles to its mouth. Would any of the usual covenants in a deed be violated because a natural stream of water flowed through the land and the upper owners, therefore, had an easement in such land? Clearly not. In Washburn on Easements, 19, it is said: "The term `natural easements,' as applicable especially to the case of flowing water, is often made use of by courts of common law and is not likely to mislead the reader, inasmuch as the context usually shows in what sense the term is employed. But as will appear hereafter that an easement when technically considered is an interest which one man has in another's estate by grant or its equivalent, prescription, it seems at first thought to be inconsistent to characterize what belongs to an estate as inseparably incident thereto and forming part and parcel thereof, by the name of easement or servitude. It may be in many respects, and perhaps most respects, like an easement and may be treated accordingly, and yet will hardly come within the requirements of what constitutes an easement at common law." Again at page 276 the learned author, speaking of the flow of water in natural streams, says: "The right of enjoying this flow without *480 disturbance or interruption by any other proprietor is one jurenaturæ and is an incident of property in the land, not an appurtenance to it, like the right he has to enjoy the soil itself in its natural state unaffected by the tortious acts of a neighboring land-owner. It is an inseparable incident to the ownership of land, made by an inflexible rule of law an absolute and fixed right, and can only be lost by grant or twenty years adverse possession." In Angell on Water-Courses (§ 90), it is said: "The right to the use of the flow of water in its natural course and to the maintenance of its fall on the land of the proprietor is not what is called an easement, because it is inseparably connected with and inherent in the property in the land; it is a parcel of the inheritance and passes with it." InStokoe v. Singers (8 Ell. Bl. 31), ERLE, J., said: "The right to the natural flow of water is not an easement, but a natural right." In Johnson v. Jordan (2 Metc. 234), SHAW, Ch. J., speaking of the right of an owner of land through which a stream of water flowed, to have the water come to and pass from his land unobstructed, said: "It is inseparably annexed to the soil and passes with it, not as an easement, not as an appurtenance, but as parcel." Easements proper are incorporeal rights, but the right to have water flow in its natural channel is a corporeal right.
So the right to have the water flow to and from the land conveyed to the plaintiffs was a corporeal right, and part and parcel of the premises granted, and was, therefore, covered by the deed. The plaintiffs were disturbed, in the possession of the parcel thus granted, by Douglass under his paramount right, and in part evicted therefrom and, therefore, there was a breach of the covenant for quiet enjoyment. They bought a water power. That was a corporeal right covered by the deed, and they were evicted from a portion thereof.
These views are in no degree in conflict with any thing decided in the case of Green v. Collins (
The learned counsel for the plaintiffs has relied much upon the case of Adams v. Conover (supra.) To some extent that case is an authority for his contention. There, as here, the plaintiff bought water power, a corporeal right, and he was dispossessed of some of it. He bought a dam at a certain height. That was part and parcel of the premises which the deed professed to convey, and he was obliged to remove some of it, and thus he was actually deprived of a portion of the premises covered by his deed. That case too rests upon ample authority. Suppose one takes a deed with a covenant for quiet enjoyment of land with a house thereon, and it turns out that a third person has title to the house which he removes. Can it be doubted that the grantor would be liable on his covenant for quiet enjoyment? (Combs v. Fisher, 3 Bibb, 51; Funk v. Creswell,
It has sometimes been supposed that there was a conflict between the cases of Green v. Collins and Adams v.Conover. The distinction between the two cases was clearly pointed out in the opinion written in the last case. In the one case the grantee got all that was covered by his deed and there was no breach of warranty. In the other case the grantee did not get all that was covered by his deed, and there was a breach of warranty. The distinction between the two cases is as wide as a gulf, and it would seem that any diligent, unprejudiced, competent investigator should not fail to perceive it.
The claim is also made, on behalf of the defendant, that the *482 plaintiffs must be presumed to have known of the paramount right of Douglass at the time of their purchase, and hence that they cannot now complain of its existence. But it does not appear that that right was apparent, and there can be no presumption that they knew of it. If such knowledge made any difference, it was matter of defense which it was incumbent upon the defendant to establish.
We, therefore, conclude that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs, with leave to the defendant to answer on payment of the costs within twenty days after their adjustment.
All concur.
Judgment accordingly.