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Henderson Estate Co. v. Carroll Electric Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
Jun 8, 1906
113 App. Div. 775 (N.Y. App. Div. 1906)

Opinion

June 8, 1906.

Edward S. Rapallo [ Willard Parker Butler with him on the brief], for the appellants.

Allison Butts [ John Hackett with him on the brief], for the respondent.



The plaintiffs claim that they should succeed in this action upon two grounds, first, because their rights as lower riparian owners have been invaded by the defendant; second, because the rights reserved in the conveyance by the common grantor have likewise been violated.

As to the riparian rights, the law seems to be settled in this State against the plaintiffs' contention, as the doctrine of the leading case in Massachusetts ( Gould v. Boston Duck Co., 13 Gray, 442) has been expressly approved and adopted by the Court of Appeals. ( Clinton v. Myers, 46 N.Y. 511; Bullard v. Saratoga Victory Mfg. Co., 77 id. 525.) The appellants cite Strobel v. Kerr Salt Co. ( 164 N.Y. 303) and Pierson v. Speyer (178 id. 270), but the logic of these cases is that the maxim, sic utere tuo, ut alienum non lædas, and the rule, aqua currit et debet currere, ut currere solebat, must be applied so as to effect the highest average benefit to all the riparian owners, instead of absolutely precluding the beneficial enjoyment of any one. Concededly some detention must occur in order to accumulate the water sufficiently to furnish any head for the generation of power, and unless each millowner can cause such detention as a reasonable use may require, no one but the lowest on the stream could have any beneficial enjoyment thereof, and the test is whether the use is reasonable, not whether possible injury may result. Certainly the court will not undertake to regulate the hours during which the millowners may operate their properties, especially in view of the finding of the referee, amply supported by the evidence, that it has been the immemorial custom of millowners on the stream to operate both night and day according as it suited their convenience. The defendant is entitled to the first use of the water by reason of its advantageous position on the stream. Concededly its requirements are not in excess of the ordinary flow of the stream. Its use is, therefore, reasonable, as the referee has found, and if such reasonable use results in some water escaping over the plaintiffs' dam without being utilized the fault must be charged to the inadequacy of their dam to impound the water, because so long as the defendant's use of the water is reasonable it has the right during periods of extreme drought to detain it for a sufficient time to create a head, even though such detention results in depriving the lower riparian owners of the usual flow during some periods of the day. These conclusions are abundantly sustained by the authorities cited supra.

The question whether the defendant is violating the rights reserved by the plaintiffs' grantor in the deed to the defendant's predecessor in title is more difficult of solution. The plaintiffs do not claim under the covenant to maintain the dam, practically conceding in their brief that an action for the breach of such covenant would be barred by the Statute of Limitations. They only resort to such covenant in aid of and for the purpose of interpreting the reservation in the deed of the right to use the mill pond "as a reservoir for the purpose of flowage as heretofore for the benefit of the privileges below." There can be no doubt that this language was sufficient to reserve a privilege in the nature of an easement ( Andrus v. National Sugar Refining Co., 72 App. Div. 551, and cases cited), and mere nonuser is not sufficient to work an abandonment of an easement created by grant, at least in the absence of such unequivocal acts or conduct as show an intention to abandon. ( Welsh v. Taylor, 134 N.Y. 450; White v. M.R. Co., 139 id. 19; Roby v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 142 id. 176.) The difficulty, however, consists in determining just what rights were reserved, and in determining this question the restrictions in the deed are to be construed strictly against the grantor. ( Duryea v. Mayor, 62 N.Y. 592.) The plaintiffs contend that before the conveyance of 1857 it had been the custom of the lower millowners to lower the gate at the dam in question whenever their necessities required more water, but the referee, upon conflicting evidence, has resolved this question in favor of the defendant, and we cannot say that the finding is not justified by the evidence. His conclusion was that the parties intended to reserve nothing more than the right to have a dam maintained, the dominant estate to receive no benefit therefrom, except as resulted from the storage of the water and the use of such water as flowed over the dam and through the wheels, but the plaintiffs insist that even conceding this to be the correct interpretation, at least some privilege was reserved, and that a use of the property now in such manner as to interfere with the beneficial enjoyment of the plaintiffs' property violates the right thus reserved. It must be conceded that the use made by the defendant differs materially from that made of the property prior to the grant of 1857, but it is not clear that the parties intended to restrict the owner of the servient estate to the precise use made of the property prior to the grant. The parties may reasonably be supposed to have contemplated that, with new improvements, changes would occur in the method and extent of such use, and such changes have been occurring over a period of forty-three years without a protest or suggestion from the plaintiffs or their predecessors in title that their rights were being invaded. It may well be that the common grantor, by whose conveyance the right in question was reserved, supposed that the mere reservation of a right to have a dam maintained without any restrictions upon the use which the owner could make of it would furnish the flowage desired for the privileges below. There are no express words restricting the owner of the servient estate respecting its use of the dam, and there is much force in the suggestion made by the learned referee that it is unreasonable to suppose that the grantee of a power designed to be used for an important industry would consent that the use of such power be made entirely subservient to the use of others. The only words in the deed descriptive of the use reserved are the words "as heretofore," thus leaving the matter entirely dependent upon parol proof, and while we are not prepared to say that the silence of the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title respecting the changes that have occurred over a period of forty-three years has worked an extinguishment of the easement, such silence may be considered in determining the practical construction of the easement adopted by the parties themselves. ( Hazleton v. Webster, 20 App. Div. 177; Mudge v. Salisbury, 110 N.Y. 413.) If the common grantor reserved nothing more than the right to have a dam maintained, the plaintiffs cannot complain. If it intended to restrict the use which the owners of the dam could make of it so that such use should be subservient to the use of the grantor, apt language could have been used to express such intention, and while we are not free from doubt respecting the intention of the parties, it is clear that such doubt must be resolved against the plaintiffs, who are invoking the extraordinary power of the court to grant injunctive relief, as in such case it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish by convincing and satisfactory proof that some clear legal or equitable right is being violated. ( Snowden v. Noah, Hopk. Ch. 347. See, also, Reid v. Gifford, Id. 416, and cases cited therein.) The plaintiffs are now attempting to claim a right which they have not asserted for forty-three years, and while it is probably true that until the present method of operating the defendant's factory was adopted, the plaintiffs' property was not injuriously affected by the changes that have occurred over said period, the plaintiffs' difficulty consists of the fact that, to define the rights now asserted, they have to depend upon parol proof of conditions existing more than forty-three years ago, as to which the referee has found against them upon evidence that, adopting the most favorable view to the plaintiffs, leaves the matter in doubt. Under such circumstances, the court will not interfere by injunction.

The plaintiffs also appeal from the order granting the extra allowance, and urge that there was no basis for such an order. The subject-matter involved was the right of the plaintiffs to have the unobstructed flow of the stream, and there is proof by affidavit uncontradicted, that this was of the value of at least $10,000. The difficult and extraordinary character of the action must be conceded, and we think the value of the subject-matter involved was sufficiently proven to warrant the extra allowance. ( Hayden v. Mathews, 4 App. Div. 342; affd., 158 N.Y. 735; People v. Page, 39 App. Div. 110, 122.)

The judgment and order granting an extra allowance should be affirmed, with costs.

HIRSCHBERG, P.J., WOODWARD, GAYNOR and RICH, JJ., concurred.

Judgment and order granting extra allowance affirmed, with costs.


Summaries of

Henderson Estate Co. v. Carroll Electric Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
Jun 8, 1906
113 App. Div. 775 (N.Y. App. Div. 1906)
Case details for

Henderson Estate Co. v. Carroll Electric Co.

Case Details

Full title:THE HENDERSON ESTATE COMPANY and THE MATTEAWAN MANUFACTURING COMPANY…

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department

Date published: Jun 8, 1906

Citations

113 App. Div. 775 (N.Y. App. Div. 1906)
99 N.Y.S. 365

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