4 Or. 369 | Or. | 1873
By the Court,
The question principally controverted on the argument is, whether one who is entitled to construct a ditch or water-race and convey water over the lands of another, has the incidental right to use the soil adjacent to the race in making repairs. The brief of the appellant refers to numerous cases touching the obligation to repair and the right to enter for that purpose as between the owners of the dominant and servient estates, but the authorities cited do not directly decide the question here presented. No one of them furnishes a general rule by which to determine the right to use the soil' adjacent to the artificial watercourse for the purpose of repairs in cases where the same repairs can be made by other but more expensive means.
It is very clear from the authorities cited, and it is an elementary doctrine, that one who has the right to use has incidentally the right to repair; and it follows that if repairs cannot be made without doing acts that would otherwise be an unlawful encroachment on the lands of the owner of the servient estate, the necessity of making repairs and the right to make them includes the right to occupy and use whatever is indispensable for that purpose; but none of the authorities cited give us a rule for determining, in the absence of express agreement of the parties, whether one who has an easement in the land of another to convey a stream of water over it in a race may dig up the soil near the race for the purpose of repairing the banks, in case the repairs can be made by bringing soil from elsewhere. The appellant lays much stress on the statement made in Washburn on Basements, §§ 196, 254, and in many cases cited in his brief, to the effect that the rocks and the earth extracted in constructing a canal belong to the owner of the soil. He fails to recognize the fact that the soil of which the canal itself is constructed belongs to the owner of the servient estate, and that he who has the dominant estate and the right to repair
The right to convey water through or over the lands of another, unless it is a mere license revokable at the will of the owner of the soil, rests in grant; and the terms of the grant, when they can be definitely ascertained, control its extent. The grant may be evidenced by deed, or it may be presumed from long enjoyment. In the one case the terms of the deed, and in the other the mode of enjoyment, must be known to enable a Court to determine who is bound to repair, or to what extent a party is privileged or restricted in the mode of making repairs.
The general rule, that a party who has a right of enjoyment, has also a right to enter and make necessary repairs, is essential to the enjoyment of the thing granted. This right necessarily passes by the grant, otherwise it would be in the power of the grantor to virtually nullify and defeat his own deed, by depriving the grantee of the power to repair and use the thing granted. If the mode of enjoyment, and of making repairs, is specified in the grant, the Court ■was only to construe the contract; or, if the right has been acquired by prescription, the Court will ascertain, under the ordinary rules of evidence, how the right has been exercised and enjoyed; but cases arise where an easement has been acquired by deed, and the instrument is silent both as to the party bound to make repairs and as to the privileges and duties of the party in making them.
It has been stated, in general terms, that where the deed thus leaves the matter of repairs to be implied, each case must be determined according to its own peculiar, circumstances. The authorities cited establish the following general principles: The owner of the servient estate is not obliged to make repairs unless by virtue of a covenant so to
When a particular mode of repair is convenient, but not indispensably necessary, no general rule is laid down in the authorities cited.
In the case before us the terms of the deed are not set out, and it does not appear by the pleadings whether or not the rights of the parties in making repairs, are defined by the deed or contract under which the easement is claimed. On this point the complaint alleges that the plaintiff is owner, and in possession of, certain premises, and the defendant “ is owner, and in possession of, a right of way to a narrow strip of land through said premises, to be used as a mill-race to run the flouring-mill of the defendant.” No objection wras taken to the form of the pleading, and the Court construes this to be a statement that the defendant had an easement in the plaintiff’s land, to convey a stream of water over it in a race to the plaintiff’s mill.
The contract by which the easement was created not being before us, and this Court having no information as to its terms, touching the subject of repairs, cannot decide as a matter of law whether the defendant had a right to dig up the soil; neither can it be ascertained from the facts alleged or the evidence disclosed by the transcript, whether these repairs could have been made without digging up the soil.
The Court instructed the jury that the defendant would not be obliged to take soil from his race or bring material from elsewhere to repair a breach in the race. Under certain conditions of the pleadings and evidence, the point involved in this instruction would include a question of fact which should be submitted to the jury, but if the right depended on the construction of a deed or other writing, it was a matter to be passed upon by the Court. As it does not appear by the record whether the contract under which the easement was acquired was in evidence, we cannot say
The plaintiff requested the Court to instruct “that the defendant had no right to use the ditch for floating wood and logs.” This the Court refused to give, and charged that “if by reason of floating wood or logs the race became stopped up and thereby was caused to overflow and damage the plaintiff the defendant would be responsible for damages.”
It is not shown, by the transcript, whether or not the defendant had the right to float wood and logs in the ditch,- and no issue is made by the plaintiff on this" point. Evidence that the ditch was used for that purpose appears to have been admissible, as tending to show that the overflow was caused by a negligent or improper mode of using the ditch, but unless the overflow resulted from that use the question whether the defendant was entitled to so use the ditch was an abstract proposition, not material to the decision of the cause, and upon which it 'was not the duty of the Court to instruct. Using the ditch for that purpose was not made a ground for general or special damages, and it would have tended to mislead the jury to give an instruction from which it might be inferred that the defendant was entitled to even nominal damages for that cause alone.
There is nothing in the point first stated “that the record does not show that the jury was present during the trial on the 24th of May.” The record shows that the jury was regularly impaneled and sworn on the 23d of May; that the trial continued to the 24th, and that on the latter day the verdict was returned in Court. Every presumption is in favor of regularity after jurisdiction is acquired.
The judgment should be affirmed.