216 Mass. 83 | Mass. | 1913
The plaintiff, the owner of a mill upon a small stream, sues the defendant, an upper riparian proprietor upon the
The defendant requested the presiding judge
The common law rights and obligations of riparian owners upon streams are not open to doubt. Although the right to flowing water is incident to the title to land, there is no right of
There are numerous expressions to the effect that the rights of riparian ownership extend only to use upon and in connection with an estate which adjoins the stream and cannot be stretched to include uses reasonable in themselves, but upon and in connection with non-riparian estates. See, for example, Lord Cairns in Swindon Water Works Co. v. Wilts & Berks Canal Navigation
The governing principle of law in a case like the present is this: A proprietor may make any reasonable use of the water of the stream in connection with his riparian estate and for lawful purposes within the watershed, provided he leaves the cur
The charge of the court below was not in conformity to this principle. It would have permitted the recovery of nominal damages in any event, quite apart from the possibility of real injury to the plaintiff. But the defendant has suffered no harm by this error. The verdict of the jury was for substantial damages and there was ample evidence to support such a conclusion.
The defendant’s fourth request
Exceptions overruled.
The ruling requested by the defendant here referred to was as follows: “4. It is immaterial on the question of reasonableness of the defendant’s use of the water whether or not in using the water the defendant acted wholly irrespective of the plaintiff’s interests and of his necessities or demands for water, so long as the defendant’s use was not wanton and was with a reasonable regard to the best interest and advantage of the defendant as owner of the land and in conformity with the general use of riparian owners on this and similar streams.”