25 Ind. 409 | Ind. | 1865
This was an action by the appellees against the appellants.
The complaint was in -two paragraphs, not essentially different, so far as the question presented for our decision is concerned. It is alleged, and appears by a copy of the instrument made part of the complaint, that the defendants, in 1855, leased to the plaintiffs and one Spink, an acre of land in Daviess county, and “ the use and occupation of so much of the surplus water of the Wabash and Erie canal, at the first lock above Maysville, in said county, not required for navigation,” as might be necessary to propel a mill of a specified character, so as to perform a given amount of work. The lease was subject to certain restrictions. The rent was to be $250 per annum, and it was agreed that “ no deduction should be made in consequence of a failure of a supply of water to propel said machinery, but the full amount of said sum is to be paid as hereinafter prescribed, notwithstanding any delays or stoppages which may occur by direction of the canal officers, as herein provided, or for want of water, or from freezing, or in consequence of floods, or from any other cause whatever.” Power was reserved to the officers of the canal to draw the water out of the canal, to remain out so long as might be necessary to prevent or repair breaches thereof, remove obstructions to its navigation, or to make improvements in it, or in the works connected with it. The right was reserved, upon paying for the mill, to resume the use of the water leased whenever it might be necessary for navigation, or whenever its use for hydraulic purposes should be found in any manner to interfere with the convenient navigation of the canal. The lessees were not to assign their lease without the written consent of the trustees. It is also averred that the lessees,
There was a demurrer to the complaint, whieh was overruled, and thereupon arises the only question necessary to be considered.
The lease contains no express covenant to keep the canal in repair, and no words indicating that such was the intention of the parties. It is well settled that a lease does not necessarily imply a covenant to repair, by the lessor. This court has so held in Kellenberger v. Foresman, 13 Ind., 475. This doctrine has been applied to leases of the use of water, and no reason is perceived, why it should not be so applied. Morse v. Maddox, 17 Mo., 569. It has also been applied where a privilege had been granted to get water at a well, and the grantor had suffered the well to go to decay. Ballard v. Butler, 30 Maine, 94.
But it is urged that the instrument is more than a mere lease, or letting to use; that it is a contract to furnish the water power, and therefore necessarily implying a contract to keep up the canal so that the power can be furnished. In form, the instrument is a mere lease of the use of the water, and we perceive nothing to distinguish the case so as to make it an exception to the general doctrine that the landlord is not bound to repair in the absence of a covenant to do so. The case of Morse v. Maddox, supra, was a lease for five years of. land, and “ also the mill privilege by and through the saw mill flume of the lessor, or his fore-bay, or out of his mill pond in some way,” to propel the machinery of a saddle-tree factory, The lessee built his factory, and during the term the dam became so decayed that a sufficient supply of water was not furnished from the pond
We are not only without precedent to warrant us in adopting the construction of the instrument which is suggested on behalf of the appellees, but it seems to us entirely inadmissible in view of the known circumstances, constituting a part of the State’s public history, and also in view of the plain letter of the contract.
At the date of the lease the canal was a great line of intercommunication, doing a large business, and doubtless neither party contemplated the remotest probability of its abandonment for purposes of navigation. That it would continue to be used therefor seems to have been so confidently relied upon that the lease is destitute of any clause intended to provide for a different .event. The plaintiffs did not require any stipulations for their security in that respect, and none whatever were inserted. The lease was of surplus water not needed for navigation, and ample provision was made for a state of affairs which seems to have
The judgment is reversed, wdth costs, and the cause remanded, with directions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, and to set aside all proceedings subsequent to the filing of the demurrer.