152 Mich. 451 | Mich. | 1908
The title to two parcels of land, one on either bank of the river Raisin, theretofore owned and, with the appurtenant water power, conveyed in severalty, upon each of which parcels a mill, operated by water power, had for many years existed, passed to a single owner. The water power is not created by the use of the water from the river in its natural state. There is a pond or reservoir, a dam holding the water and causing it to overflow a considerable territory. The owner, under date June 6, 1878, mortgaged both parcels of land and in the mortgage conveyed, also,
“All the right and privilege which the said parties of the first part may have or possess of raising water and flowing lands for mill purposes. ”
Under date June 9, 1879, he executed to the same mortgagee a mortgage upon the land upon the west side of the river, the mortgage containing the following:
“Also granting and conveying to the said party of the second part, her heirs and assigns, all the right and privileges which said party of the first part may have or possess for raising water or flowing land for mill purposes, together with the privileges of the water power to be used in any manner whatsoever.”
These mortgages were duly recorded. Upon foreclosure of the last-mentioned mortgage, the sale táking place
“The mill privilege and water power there situate, with the right to flow all the lands now overflowed by the water by the mill dam at its present height together with the right and privilege to use and make use of the water power there situated and hereby conveyed in any manner whatsoever.”
In 1894, the original owner and mortgagor conveyed to the mortgagee — counsel have assumed in payment of the first mortgage — the land on the east side of the river:
“Also conveying the mill privilege and water power there situate with the right to flow all of the land now overflowed by water and necessary to overflow by water, to keep and maintain the dam there situated at its present height together with the right and privilege to use and to make use of the water power there situated and hereby conveyed in any manner whatsoever.”
The purchaser (mortgagee) conveyed this land to defendant May 4,1900, describing water rights as last above set out. Previously, she had leased the sawmill and mill yard and “ also all the water power of the river Raisin, all situated on the east side of the river.
Defendant first went into possession of the land on the east side of the river in 1897 under a contract for its purchase, and has ever since been in possession. He repaired the sawmill and flume, put another water wheel in position, and put in feed-grinding machinery. Complainant seems to have made no use of the water; on the contrary, he filled up the flume on his land with earth.
It is the contention of complainant that at the foreclosure sale the purchaser acquired the lands on the weBt side of the stream and all the water power — that the owner and mortgagor was divested of all water rights and that
“ The right to the use of the watercourse coming to the mill and furnishing power for working it, and also to the canal or raceway which carries the water from the mill, to the full extent of the grantor’s right and power so to grant them. Prescott v. White, 21 Pick. (Mass.) 341.” Richardson v. Bigelow, 15 Gray (Mass.), 156.
See, also, Horne v. Hutchins, 71 N. H. 117; Curtis v. Norton, 58 Mich. 411; Mandeville v. Comstock, 9 Mich. 536, 539. But the implication must be clear which would sustain the grantee in a claim that the rights appurtenant to the property had been increased . or diminished. Complainant’s rights do not rest in implication but in a grant. The rights of his grantor rested in a grant. It is a general rule of the law of easements that where the owner of two tenements sells one of them, the purchaser takes the portion sold with all the benefits and burdens which appear at the time of the sale to belong to it as between it and the property which the vendor retains. Seymour v. Lewis, 13 N. J. Ch. 439. Every grant of a thing naturally imports a grant of it as it actually exists. United States v. Appleton, 1 Sumn. (U. S.) 502. Whether we consider the words employed in the mortgage or in the deed or 1 ook for evidence of intention in the physical situation
There are also other sufficient grounds for denying him relief. When complainant obtained his deed, the original owner was in possession of the land on the east side of the river and using the water in operating the mill. He continued to use it for six years. The tenant of his grantee used it. Defendant has used it since 1897. He has expended money in repairing the flume and in new machinery. Complainant has in no manner interfered with or questioned this use of the water or defendant’s
“ I got the impression some way that Mr. Dresselhouse had been there nearly long enough, nearly fifteen years, and I wanted to look up the title.”
This was just before beginning this suit. Whatever may have been the object of complainant in purchasing this mill site and the power, he has rested too long upon the rights which he now asserts — rights disputed by his deed, by his grantor’s conduct, by defendant’s record title and conduct, and by his own inaction.
In the decree, the court below settled the respective rights of the parties in and to the use and employment of the water and the power by the determination that each was entitled as tenant in common with the other to one-half part thereof. In a form of decree prepared by complainant’s counsel, it is asked that the court, if exclusive rights were denied, award to complainant a two-thirds interest instead, and to defendant a one-third interest, upon the ground that the intake and flow on the west side of the stream has always been twice the size of the