Tabor v. . Bradley

18 N.Y. 109 | NY | 1858

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *111 The conveyances under which the defendants claim title, upon their face purport to convey simply the lands within the boundaries described in such conveyances. There is no allusion to any mill or water rights or privileges contained in them. If anything more than the lands thus described passed by those conveyances, it must pass by reason of being in some manner attached or annexed to the premises so as to pass as appurtenant to them, or the conveyances must have been made under such circumstances as would lead necessarily to the conclusion that the collateral privileges claimed were designed to pass with the land.

The right to flow the lands of another, like a right of way, is an easement, and can only be created by grant. And where an easement already exists, and is attached to lands, it is well established that it will pass by a conveyance of the lands as an appurtenant. But when the original conveyance was made in this case, there was no easement in existence. A man cannot have an easement over his own lands. The definition of an easement is the right which one man has to use the land of another for a specific purpose. (3 Kent's Com., 528.) No easement, therefore, being in existence at the time of the original conveyance, it could not pass as appurtenant to the land conveyed. This has frequently been held in the case of a right of way. In Grant v. Chase (17 Mass., 443), it was held that the conveyance of a specific piece of ground, carved out of a larger piece held by the grantor and described by metes and bounds, *112 carries nothing which is not included within the boundaries; that a right of way through the premises of the grantor does not pass. In that case two tenements were held by the same person, one of which was occupied by the owner and the other was leased from time to time, and occupied by tenants. There was only one well and out-house for both tenements, which were used in common by the occupants of both. The leased tenement was afterwards sold, the premises being described in the conveyance by metes and bounds, "with all the privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging." The purchaser and his grantees claimed that the right to use the well and out-house passed to them by the conveyance, but the court held as above stated.

So in Johnson v. Jordan (2 Metc., 237), it was held that "when the owner of two adjoining messuages or lots of land, one of which he occupies and the other he leases, constructs a drain, from the messuage which he leases through the lands which he occupies, into a common sewer, and permits his tenants to use it for ten years and more, and then sells both messuages and lots on the same day to different purchasers, and in his deed to the purchaser of the lot which he formerly leased does not mention the drain, such purchaser acquires no right by the deed to the use of the drain through the other lot of land, if he, by reasonable labor or expense, can make a drain without going through that land."

In Whalley v. Thompson (1 Bos. Pull., 371), it was held that when "one, being seized in fee of the adjoining closes A and B, over the former of which a way had immemorially been used to the latter, devises B, with the appurtenances, the devisee cannot, under the word appurtenant, claim a right of way over A to B, as no new right of way is thereby created, and the old one was extinguished by the unity of seizin in the devisor.

So in Manning v. Smith (6 Conn., 289), it was held that "when the subject matter of a deed, as described in the premises was a certain piece of land, and the habendum was of *113 the premises, with all their appurtenances, a right to the use of the water conducted artificially on the premises from the other land of the grantor, in the manner in which it was enjoyed by him at the time of the grant, did not pass by the deed." It was laid down in that case that "the subject matter of a deed is to be ascertained from the premises." (Gayetty v. Bethune, 14Mass., 49; 2 Nev. Mann., 517; 5 Barn. Adolph., 791; 6Nev. Mann., 282; 4 Adolph. Ellis, 749.)

There are a great many cases where it has been held that some collateral privileges pass, by the conveyance, with the main subject of the grant. Such has been held to be the effect of a conveyance in terms of a "manor," "messuage" or "farm," known "by a certain name, and including sundry distinct tenements, buildings or fields, which have been used with the principal thing, and reputed parcel of it." All these would pass under the general name of the "manor," "messuage," c. "They pass, not as appurtenances, but as parcel of the granted or devised premises, upon the intention of the parties as collected from the instrument and explained by reference to the facts." (Whitney v. Olney, 3 Mason, 280.) So the conveyance in terms of a "mill" or "mill-race" or "privileges" would undoubtedly pass the right to flow sufficient to raise the necessary head of water to carry the mill. (4 Paige, 77; 4 Kent's Com., 517.)

Such were most if not all the cases cited upon the argument by the defendants' counsel. In the case of Le Ray v. Platt (4Paige, 77), the conveyance was of a "mill lot" with the "mill stream." In the case of New Ipswich Factory v. Batchelder (3N.H., 190), the premises were conveyed with one-half of "all water privileges" and "all other privileges annexed to or belonging to the premises." In these cases it was held that everything attached to the mills and necessary to manage them passed by the conveyance. (Kent v. Waite, 10 Pick., 138;Nicholson v. Chamberlain, Cro Jas., 121; Kieffer v.Imhoff, 26 Penn., 438; Forbush v. Lombard, *114 13 Metc., 109; Farrar v. Stackpole, 6 Greenl., 154.) InThayer v. Payne (2 Cush., 327), two lots were owned by the same person. At the time of conveying one, there was a drain from the house across the other. The description is not given in the report of the case, but I infer from the opinion of FLETCHER, J., that it purported to convey the house and lot, with the privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging, c. It was held, that if the use of the drain was necessary to the beneficial use of the premises granted, it passed by the conveyance. If the house and lot were conveyed in terms, no one, I think, will dispute the correctness of the decision. It would come clearly within the principle laid down.

In the case of Oakley v. Stanley (5 Wend., 523), I understand that the conveyance under which the right was claimed was of the premises, including the "dam" in terms — that the dam was actually mentioned in the deed. If that was so, it would clearly come within the other cases I have cited. Besides, it was proved in that case that the consideration of the conveyance was some $1,250, and that the principal value of the premises conveyed consisted in the mill privilege.

As I have before suggested, it is not necessary to contend that a deed purporting to convey by metes and bounds may not be legally construed, in the light of the surrounding circumstances, to include also privileges annexed to or connected with the main subject of the grant.

In the case at bar, there was no proof of the kind. It was not even proved that the grantors knew of the existence of the dam at the time of the conveyance. It is not proved by what authority the mill was built; whether the builder was a mere trespasser, whether he held a contract for the land, or whether he had a license from the owners to build. It does not appear how the mill privilege would affect the value of the lot; whether it would constitute a very small or a very large proportion of the value of the whole premises. *115 The deed, on its face, purports to convey simply the land within its boundaries. If it be claimed that other privileges were intended by the parties to be conveyed, surely the burden of proof is upon the defendants, to show the surrounding circumstances which would authorize the court to give to it an effect beyond its strict literal interpretation, so as to carry with the main subject of conveyance the right to flow other lands. No such proof having been given, we must, I think, assume that it was the design of the parties that the grantee should only take the premises included within the boundaries contained within the deed, and the judgment must be affirmed with costs.

JOHNSON, Ch. J., ROOSEVELT, HARRIS and DENIO, JS., concurred, the latter putting some stress upon the special circumstances that, at the time the Holland Land Company conveyed to Van Horn, there was probably no dam upon the premises, it having been swept away a few days before, and if otherwise, the presumption that the grantor knows the condition of his land should not be applied to a case, like this, of the owner of a great tract of wild land, subject to the occupation and improvement of mere squatters. STRONG and SELDEN, Js., dissented; COMSTOCK, J., did not sit in the case.

Judgment affirmed.

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