Ballou v. Wood

8 Mass. 48
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Mass. 48 (Ballou v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballou v. Wood, 8 Mass. 48 (Mass. 1851).

Opinion

Fletcher, J.

This case, which is a suit in equity, was heard on bill and answer.

The plaintiffs set out, in their bill, that they are seized and possessed of certain real estate, water - privileges, and mills, situated on or near Mill river, and that they are, with certain other persons, the owners of and interested in a certain reservoir of water, which reservoir has been created and maintained at great expense for the combined use, benefit, and advantage [49]*49of the several owners thereof; and that the rights and privileges of the several owners of and persons interested in said reservoir are regulated and determined by a certain written contract, which provides that said reservoir shall be for the use and benefit of their several mills and water privileges situated below the reservoir upon Mill river, and in which the several parties agree to bear their respective portions of the expense of creating and maintaining the reservoir according to their respective number of shares, as fixed and set forth in said contract, which said contract is recorded in the registry of deeds.

The bill further states, that the only beneficial use of the water in the reservoir is to discharge it in proper quantities into Mill river, when wanted for the works and mills on said river, and that the benefits of the contract aforesaid require, that the water should be kept in the reservoir till wanted to supply water in the river.

The bill further statés, that the defendants own no mills, but claim to be the owners of all the shares in the reservoir, not owned by plaintiffs, and claim to own a majority of all said shares, and as such owners of a majority of the shares, they claim a right and threaten to let off and discharge the waters from the reservoir, and allow the same to run to waste, so that the same cannot be used for the benefit of the mills below, for which purpose the reservoir was created, and that in pursuance of such threat the defendants are in fact discharging the water from the reservoir, and allowing the same to run to waste — not because the defendants themselves get, or expect to get any benefit therefrom, but to prevent the accumulation thereof for the use and benefit of the plaintiffs — that the letting off of the water at this time is contrary to the provisions of the contract aforesaid, and rather a damage than a benefit to plaintiffs’ mills; whereas, if the water could be kept back and saved as heretofore, the plaintiffs would receive the usual advantages thereof, without any injury to the defendants, and that the object, for which the reservoir was made and maintained, is thus defeated and wholly lost, and the reservoir thus destroyed. And the plain ■ [50]*50tiffs pray that the defendants may be restrained from letting off and wasting the water, as aforesaid, and for further relief.

The defendants in their answer admit that some of the plaintiffs, and deny that others, are interested in the mills on Mill river. They admit that the plaintiffs are interested in the reservoir with the defendants in the manner and proportions set out in the contract between the parties, a copy of which contract is annexed and made a part of the answer. The defendants in their answer claim to be the owners of thirty shares in the reservoir, and admit the plaintiffs to be owners of the other fourteen shares, there being forty-four shares in all; and the defendants claim a right to hold and manage their shares in connection with the owners of the other shares according to the terms and provisions of the contract aforesaid, and allege that the plaintiffs own their shares as distinct from, and not as appurtenant to, any mills, but solely under and according to the provisions of said contract, to be held and managed according to the. provisions thereof, by which provisions, the owners of the major part of the shares are to regulate, control, and manage the use of the reservoir and the waters therein. And defendants further say that the letting off of the water, of which the plaintiffs complain, was in pursuance of a vote of the owners of a major part of the shares, and to repair the flume and dam.

But the defendants contend-that they may lawfully draw down the water of the reservoir in such manner and at such times and in such quantities as the owners of the major part of the shares, acting under the provisions of said agreement, shall choose, without being thereby liable to the plaintiffs under the agreement for so doing, or being lawfully subject to be enjoined from so doing, as prayed for in the plaintiffs’ bill.

The defendants in their answer further say they do not deny, that, in letting out said water, they did not regard what might be the effect thereof upon plaintiffs’ mills at some future time, should the water in the stream become insufficient to carry their works, as the defendants claimed and still claim a right in the major part of the proprietors to keep up, or draw down, the waters of the reservoir at pleasure, as against the plaintiffs [51]*51and those owning less than a major part of the shares, if done, as in this instance, according to the terms of the agreement.

The deeds conveying the lands for the reservoir to the original owners are in the case and have been examined. But the view, which the court have taken of this case, renders it unnecessary to consider several of the questions which were raised and discussed at the bar. The questions whether the shares in the reservior were, originally, technically appurtenant to the mills, and if so appurtenant, whether they have since been separated, and whether the shares originally appurtenant to one mill can be made appurtenant to another mill, and other questions presented by counsel, need not be settled in order to reach a just decision of thé case.

The rights of these parties, in regard to the matters in question, may be determined by a very simple view of their legal relations to each other.

The reservior property is divided into forty-four shares; thirty of these shares are owned by the defendants, and fourteen by the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs in their bill complain of the defendants, in effect, that they are destroying the common property, by letting all the water run off, and run to waste, so that the reservoir will be destroyed and rendered of no use as a reservoir, and that this is in violation of the rights of the plaintiffs, who own mills on the stream below, and want, and have a right to, the water of the reservoir for the use of their mills. But the defendants insist, that they, as owners of the major part of the shares of the reservoir, have a right, if they think proper to do so, to let all the water run off and run to waste, and thus destroy the reservoir and render it of no use, wholly irrespective of the interests of the plaintiffs.

How far these claims of the respective parties are well or ill founded, must be determined by a reference to their legal titles to the property in question, and then- legal relations to each other. Upon examining the legal title to this reservoir, it is quite apparent that it is owned by these parties, plaintiffs and defendants, as tenants in common, the plaintiffs owning fourteen shares and the defendants thirty shares, undivided Looking to the legal title, therefore, the rights and powers of [52]*52the parties to and over the property are such, and only such as belong to them as tenants in common. These parties are before the court as tenants in common.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nash v. Lull
102 Mass. 60 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1869)
Holden v. Curtis
2 N.H. 61 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Mass. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballou-v-wood-mass-1851.