48 N.J. Eq. 359 | New York Court of Chancery | 1891
The main object of the suit in this case is to procure a decree settling the complainant’s title to an incorporeal hereditament. The bill is filed under the statute of 1870, authorizing this court in certain cases to settle the title to lands. Rev. p. 1189. The complainant owns a tract of land lying adjacent to a tract owned by the defendant. Both tracts lie adjacent to the Morris canal. There is a mill on the complainant’s tract which is in part operated by water power. The water so used by the complainant is obtained from the canal, and is carried from the canal by a raceway across the lands of the defendant. The complainant claims a right to have water flow from the canal across the lands of the defendant to her mill, and avers that she is in peaceable possession of such right, claiming to own the same, and that the defendant denies her title thereto, and that no suit .is pending to enforce or test the validity of such denial; she, therefore, asks that her title to such right may be settled by the decree of this court. It is thus seen that the subject-matter of this suit is the right of the complainant to an easement in the lands of the defendant. The defendant has demurred, specifying several
The proposition on which the demurrer rests is this: that the statute of 1870 comprehends lands alone; in other words, that it provides a means for settling, in certain cases, the title to corporeal hereditaments, as distinguished from incorporeal hereditaments, but makes no provision for settling the title to incorporeal hereditaments. The word hereditaments embraces everything that may be inherited, be it corporeal or incorporeal. The difference, however, between a corporeal and an incorporeal hereditament is wide and vital. Says Blackstone:
“ Corporeal hereditaments are the substance, which may be always seen, always handled; incorporeal hereditaments are but a sort of accidents, which inhere in and are supported by that substance. * * * Their existence is merely in idea and abstracted contemplation, though their effects and profits may be frequently objects of our bodily senses.” 2 Bl. Com. 19.
And Kent says:
“ Corporeal hereditaments are confined to land * * * and that incorporeal hereditaments comprise certain inheritable rights, which are not, strictly speaking, of a corporeal nature, or land, although they are. by their own nature, or use, annexed to corporeal inheritances, and are rights issuing out of them or concern them.” 3 Kent’s Com. § 402, marg.
The word land has in law a well-settled meaning. It includes the surface of the ground and everything that is on it and under it, but does not comprehend incorporeal hereditaments. Under a charter giving a corporation power to take land, by the exercise of the right of eminent domain, it has been repeatedly held, here and elsewhere, that a mere incorporeal hereditament could not be taken, and that this was so because land, according to its well-settled legal signification, was not broad enough to comprehend an incorporeal hereditament, but simply embraced things corporeal. Watson v. Acquackanock Water Co., 7 Vr. 195; De Camp v Hibernia R. R. Co., 18 Vr. 43.
Now, whether the complainant claims to hold the easement in-question . as a right in gross, or as a thing appurtenant to the ■land of which her mill constitutes a part, does not very clearly appear; but if it be conceded that the averments of the bill ■show that the easement is appurtenant to the complainant’s land, ■still it is obvious that it is a thing which, as a matter of law, is ■incapable of being held in possession in the sense in which that •word is used in this statute. As there used, it obviously means the occupation of and the exercise of dominion over a thing of ■substance which may be. seen and touched, and not the mere exercise of a privilege which is without substance- and impalpable. Possession of the land to which the easement is appurtenant does not give the complainant possession of the easement. That is a thing which she may enjoy, but cannot possess as lands are possessed.. If the easement exists at all, it exists in the-lands of the defendant; he is in the exclusive possession.of that, and rightfully. The complainant makes no claim- of a right to go on the land of the defendant; her claim, stated in its broadest form, is merely of a right to have water flow from the Morris canal across the defendant’s land to her mill. Such right is not, in my judgment, within the protection of the statute, whether regard be had simply to its language or to its general design or policy. The design of the statute must, I think, be considered authoritatively settled. The chief-justice, in speaking of it, in-pronouncing the opinion of the court of errors and appeals in Jersey City v. Lembech, said : “ The inequity that was designed* to be remedied grew out of the situation of a person in the possession of lands as owner, in which land another person claimed an interest which he would not enforce, and the hardship was,, that the person so in possession could not force his adversary to sue, and thus put the claim to the test.” And then, in illustrating the class of cases to which the remedy given by the statute applied, he said: “ I would instance, as a sample, the case-of a doubtful claim upon land arising under a will, a person who» asserts an absolute title being in possession. In. this situation*
. On the argument, an attempt was made to uphold the bill as .a bill to relieve the complainant from the consequences of a forfeiture, but, viewing the bill in that aspect, there can be no doubt -.that it is fatally defective in more than one essential point.
The demurrer must be sustained, with costs.