Ballou v. Harris Others

5 R.I. 419
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 5 R.I. 419 (Ballou v. Harris Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballou v. Harris Others, 5 R.I. 419 (R.I. 1858).

Opinion

Bhayton, J.

By an act of the general assembly, passed at-the January session thereof, 1849, entitled “ an act in relation to the Blackstone Canal,” the Blackstone Canal Company were authorized to discontinue the canal constructed by them as a navigable highway; and the act provided, that said company should be discharged from all obligation to maintain the same, or any of the dams, ponds, embankments, or other .structures by them erected or created for the purposes of said canal, except where they had, by contract, bound themselves so to do. The act also provided, that all the lands upon, through, or over which the canal, or any of the appurtenances thereof, were located or constructed, under their charter, should revert to the persons who were owners thereof at the time of the location, their heirs and assigns, discharged of all easements thereon, or thereupon, excepting however, in so far as a continuance thereof should be necessary for the protection of the legal or equitable *422 rights and interests of the owners, or of persons having title to, or interest in, the mills, improvements, or investments made along the route of said canal in consequence of the dams and ponds located or constructed or raised by said company, and by means whereof such owners or persons interested had acquired a legal or equitable right to the continuance of any such dam or pond forever ; and in such case it was provided, that damages for the future maintenance of such dam, pond, &c., should be assessed to the owners of the land, by commissioners to be appointed for that purpose.

It is under this act, that the present claimant filed his claim for damages against the defendants, and alleged, that he was the owner in fee of certain land upon which a portion of said canal was located; that, by the continuance of this portion of the canal, great damage was done to him, and that the defendants are the persons interested in, and benefited by, its continuance ; and, thereupon, he claims an assessment of damages against them, according to the provisions of said act.

At the time of the location of this canal by the Blackstone Canal Company, and for a long time afterwards, one James Arnold was the owner of the land.

At the trial, the claimant, for the purpose of proving his right, as reversioner to this land over which the canal was located, to damages for its continuance, put in evidence a deed executed by the said James Arnold to him, dated August 29,1839. This deed conveyed to the claimant the land, describing it by metes and bounds, together with a certain water privilege appurtenant thereto, thus described in the deed: “ and the water privilege aforementioned is the right to take and use, on the premises, one sixteenth part of the water of the Blackstone River at said Woonsocket Falls dam, and from said dam and the fall thereof, from the top of the water on said dam, to the extent formerly conveyed to Thomas Arnold and others.” The deed contains, also, this reservation: “ Also, said James Arnold reserves to himself, his heirs and assigns, the right to keep open the trench, as it now is, whereby the water is carried from said dam to his, the said James’s, grist-mill lot and elsewhere, and the right to draw water, through said last-mentioned trench, to lands of the *423 grantor to any extent, not impairing said George’s use of the aforesaid sixteenth of said water.”

In their defence, the defendants claimed, that under the deed and the reservation therein made by James Arnold, the claimant was precluded from closing up the canal in question, and was bound to keep it open, as it was at the time of the execution of the said deed.

The court ruled, proforma, that the construction of the claimant’s grant, taking into consideration the actual state of things existing at the time of the grant, as proved, did not reserve to James Arnold, his heirs and assigns, nor except out of the grant, the right of the claimant to the reversion of that section of the canal, and to close up the same; and so instructed the jury; and the question is, whether this construction is correct.

From the statement of the case it appears, that prior to the charter of the canal company, there had been a trench, leading from the pond formed by the Woonsocket Falls dam, of the width of some ten feet, extending from the grist-mill lot of Arnold up to the pond, and entering it near the east end of the dam; that the canal company constructed their canal by excavating the earth on the north side of this trench, making the space of sufficient width for the purposes of navigation; that this mode of construction was continued from the gristmill lot upward, toward the pond, the greater part of the distance to the pond, and then, curving off from the old trench at that end, cut off the point of land now called the island, leaving that between the old trench and the new canal; the trench being of much less width than the canal. It appears, also, that at the time of the execution of this deed, three fourths of all the water which passed to the mills below, for their use, passed through this canal on the west side of the island thus formed, and could not be freely and beneficially carried to the mill otherwise.

The same necessity still exists; and, as the proof shows, in order to derive the full benefit of the water power created by the dam, it would be necessary to remove the island, and open the whole space to the pond.

Taking along with us these facts, and looking at the terms *424 of the reservation in this deed, we cannot hesitate in the conclusion to which we ought to come as to the right of the parties under it, — that it was the intent of the parties to this deed, that at no time forever thereafter should the capacity of the avenue through which the water then flowed from the pond — the water power of which he had conveyed in great part, but which he also retained in part — be rendered less by being straitened or contracted, but should remain open, of the width it then was ; and that this avenue, called by the parties the trench, which conveyed the water from the dam to the grist-mill lot, included not merely the outlet of the pond west of the island, as it is called, but the outlet of it also by the canal, dug by the canal company under the charter, to the east of the island. We must presume that it was some practical benefit which the grantor desired to reserve, and which the grantee consented should be reserved. An ample supply of water for his mills could be his only object in keeping open any trench, or canal, of any width. It must have been quite immaterial to the parties whether the trench were wide or narrow, so long as the supply of water was preserved as it then was. The mode of securing the continuance of this supply, was, by providing that the passage-way for it should not be contracted. We must regard the language here used as providing the mode to secure the supply.

We see nothing in the language used, as explanatory of the word “ trench,” which militates against this construction. The argument for the claimant is, that as the trench is described as one which carries the water from “ the dam,” and as the opening at the south end of the island is that which takes the water from that part of the pond, and from that point nearest the dam, the parties could not have intended to include the canal, which opens into another part of the pond.

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Bluebook (online)
5 R.I. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballou-v-harris-others-ri-1858.