55 N.H. 359 | N.H. | 1875
Lead Opinion
The deed under which the defendant claims contains these words: "said Shaw to have the privilege of flowing said tract up to the said ash tree."
The Squam river runs in a direction nearly west at this place towards the Merrimack. There are upon it two mill privileges, — one owned by the plaintiffs, and one owned by the defendant, — the defendant claiming under the above mentioned deed from Shepard to Shaw, and the plaintiffs claiming under a deed from Shaw to Shepard. The dividing line between the two privileges, as fixed by these deeds, was a continuation of the east side line of the tract of land north of the Squam river, purchased by Shaw of Gordon and Merrill, and passing by an ash tree at or near the bank of the river at the south-east corner of said tract. It appears from the deeds that the parties, Shaw and Shepard, each had or claimed to have some rights in a strip of land on the south bank of the river. The defendant claims the right to flow so as to raise the water as high as the bottom of the ash tree. The plaintiffs claim, and the court below held, that his right to raise the water was limited by the line fixed upon as the dividing line between the privileges, and that the defendant could not rightfully, by means of his dam, flow or raise the water on the plaintiffs' side of the line.
By the deed of Shepard, all his rights in and to the Squam river below that line are conveyed to Shaw. The deed next conveys all the grantor's right to a strip of land three rods wide south of the river, excepting a strip three rods wide extending towards the west down the river three rods; and this tract, so reserved, the said Shaw is to have the privilege of flowing up to the ash tree.
Shaw, by his deed, conveys to Shepard all his rights in a strip of land four rods wide, extending three rods down the river on the same boundary line, and also a little above the line; so that in point of fact Shaw covers by his deed the very same strip of land south of the Squam river which Shepard conveys to Shaw, and Shaw reserves the right of flowing said tract below said ash tree. It is plain that these portions of the two deeds cover the same strip of ground, giving the ownership of the soil to Shepard and the right of flowing to Shaw; and it is plain that exactly the same right of flowing is granted by Shepard's deed to Shaw by the words "up to the ash tree," as is reserved in Shaw's deed to Shepard by the words "below the ash tree." Shaw's deed also grants all his right in the bed of the Squam river above said ash tree, which, according to the defendant's construction, would put the bed of the Squam river somewhere vertically above the ash tree.
By these deeds the east line of the Gordon and Merrill lot was made the boundary line between the two privileges, Shaw getting that part *362 of the bed of the stream which was situated below, i. e., west of the line drawn through the ash tree, and Shepard getting that part of the river east, i. e., above the line drawn through the ash tree. Shepard got the ownership of a strip of land three rods wide in his deed and four rods wide in Shaw's, and Shaw got the right to flow that strip of land as far up as he got the right to set back the water in the bed of the stream, that is, below and as far up as the same line.
It does not appear that the vertical height of this boundary line is concerned at all in the matter. The defendant's right to raise the surface of the water, or to cause it to set back, is limited by that line. If he could always raise the water as high vertically as the foot of the ash tree, he would in time of low water set the water back on to the plaintiffs' privilege, and might materially interfere with it. So, if he were limited not to go above that line vertically in time of ordinary high water, his privilege might be materially curtailed. What he gets by these conveyances is, the right to change the level of the stream as far east as that line, so as to make it below that line nearly on a level with the water at his dam, and that whether at low, medium, or ordinary high water, and he gets a corresponding right to cover with water the strip of land south of the river.
Suppose that the water in the Squam river, at the point where the line crosses it, were at its deepest point two feet deep, and the defendant's dam were so constructed as at ordinary flow of water not to alter that level: if in time of low water the defendant should so arrange his dam as to keep the water at a depth of two feet, it is obvious that he would flow back the water on to the plaintiffs' privilege and interfere with the operation of their mill, so that if this were the criterion the plaintiffs might be materially injured, — while, on the contrary, if in, times of high water the defendant could not raise the water at that point above that line, he might lose the whole of his privilege.
As it appears by the case that the defendant's grantor occupied both privileges within twenty years next before the date of the writ, there could be no adverse user for twenty years, and of course no right could be gained. Odiorne v. Lyford,
Concurrence Opinion
1. I think it is impossible to entertain a doubt as to the construction of the deed from Shepard to Shaw. It conveys all the grantor's rights in the river below a line extending across the same from the ash tree, and the right of flowing a certain described tract of land up to the tree. The defendant's contention is, that this means the right to raise the water in perpendicular height up to the body of the tree. It seems to me that would be nothing less than a most extraordinary perversion of language which, of itself, is entirely plain and unambiguous. It is certainly difficult to imagine what terms could have been used to indicate that the grantee's right of flowage should be bounded by a line crossing the river at the ash tree, if these do not. *363 The instructions on this point were in accordance with this view, and were correct.
2. There can be no doubt of the soundness of the general proposition as to flowage given to the jury. No riparian proprietor has a right to throw the water of a stream back upon the proprietors above. But it is said this general proposition should have been qualified by going into an explanation of the doctrines to be applied when the question between two shore owners is one of a reasonable use of the water, and further, by an explanation of how it would be in times of freshet, floods, accumulation of ice, c. The short and complete answer to this is, there is nothing in the case to show that either of these qualifications was called for by the facts; and further, if they were supposed by the defendant to be germane and necessary, there should have been a special request to that purpose.
3. There was clearly no evidence of a right gained by twenty years' adverse user.
SMITH, J. The instructions of the court, in regard to the height to which the defendant could flow, were correct. The deed from Shepard to Shaw, of September 22, 1847, conveys all his right to the river below a line extending across the river from the ash tree, including all his rights below said line, which he reserved in his deed to Eastman, dated December 4, 1830. The strip three rods wide, included in Shepard's deed to Shaw, reserves a strip below said line, and grants to Shaw the privilege of flowing "up to the ash tree." The deed from Shaw to Shepard, dated September 22, 1847, conveys to Shepard the strip four rods wide on the south side of the river, reserving "the right of flowing said tract below said ash tree;" and also conveys "all his right in the bed of the river above the ash tree." Construing these deeds together, as they must be, I think it clearly indicates that the intention of the parties was, to bound their respective rights of flowage by this line; that Shepard conveyed all his right below that line; and that Shaw acquired no right to flow above that line.
If the construction contended for by the defendant is the true one, he could flow up to the body of the tree, and of course as far up the river as would bring the level of the water to a line projected horizontally from the foot of the tree, and thus use the fall of the river above. An examination of the language of the deeds is conclusive that such was not the intention of the parties, and it would leave the upper mill privilege comparatively worthless.
The defendant could acquire no right to flow by prescription. Mitchell owned both privileges, and the lower one in common with Shaw from 1855 to 1862. Both parties claim under him. From 1855 to 1862, Shaw and Mitchell could gain no right by adverse possession against Mitchell; and if Shaw at any time began to acquire such right after 1862, it could not ripen into an absolute right within less than twenty years, which have not yet expired.
The defendant also objected to the instruction that if he, "by means *364 of his dam, flowed or raised the water on the plaintiffs' side of the line to any appreciable extent, the defendant would be liable," — because, as he claims, it makes him "liable for freshets, floods, accumulations of ice, and every other visitation of providence which might produce an extraordinary and unnatural rise in the stream;" — but I think this result does not follow. The instruction was, that he would be liable if he should flow above the line "by means of his dam," and not by means of freshets,c. The construction must mean, the river in its ordinary and usual stages, and not at unusual and exceptional times, when swollen by freshets and clogged by ice.
Exceptions overruled, and
Judgment on the verdict.