Berry v. Hutchins

61 A. 550, 73 N.H. 310, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 A. 550 (Berry v. Hutchins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry v. Hutchins, 61 A. 550, 73 N.H. 310, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 41 (N.H. 1905).

Opinion

Chase, J.

The description of the property conveyed by the deed, Winnipiseogee Lake Cotton and Woolen Manufacturing Company to Elisha Goodwin, dated November 29, 1854, construed *311 in Horne v. Hutchins, 71 N. H. 117, reads as follows: “A tract of land situated in said Wolfeborough, containing one acre more or less, with the gristmill and sawmill standing thereon, . . . together with the following described right or privilege in the use of the water, to wit, the right to use the water-power and mill privilege on said premises at such times as said company shall not consider the same as interfering with the use of Smith’s pond above said premises as reservoirs for the supply of water for mills anywhere upon the Winnipiseogee and Merrimack rivers, which right and use said company do fully reserve and do not convey, the said company having the right to detain and hold back or to discharge the water of said ponds at such times as they may think proper for the advantageous use of said reservoir.” It was held in that ease that “ the right to use the water-power and mill privilege ” at the dam on the granted premises (designated in this and the prior cases as dam C) “ conveyed, subject to the right specifically saved in behalf of the lower rivers, the use of the reservoir so far as reasonably necessary to the beneficial enjoyment of privilege C; that the right to the use of the reservoir beyond such reasonably necessary use by privilege C remained for any and all purposes in the grantors ”; and, further, that “ as between privileges B and C, the grant must be understood as conveying to privilege C the use of the reservoir so far as reasonably necessary to the beneficial enjoyment of that privilege.” Ib. 125, 126. The case was discharged, with the suggestion that the superior court should make such owfe'i'-and decrees as should be found necessary to a final determination of the rights of the parties in conformity with the views expressed in the opinion.

After a further consideration by the superior court, the case was again transferred to this court, when it was held that the reservoir of which the mills at dam C are entitled to the beneficial enjoyment was the reservoir as it existed at the date of the Goodwin deed. At that time only four feet in depth of water could be drawn from it when full. Subsequently, the bed of the river connecting Smith and Crooked ponds, and the outlet, of the latter pond, were lowered by the Lake Company so that four or five feet additional could be drawn. Accordingly, it was held that “ privilege C has such a right in the use of the waters of the new reservoir as would bo equivalent to its right in the use of the waters of the old reservoir, viz., the right to the reasonably necessary use of the first four feet of water, reckoning from the top of the dam, subject to the limitations in favor of the mills on the lower rivers.” In the course of the opinion it was said: “ While the owners of C cannot require the owners of A to draw down the water below the first four feet, for use at C, the owners of A cannot make use of *312 the water, either above or below the four-foot point, so as to interfere with the reasonable use of the first four feet of water by C, except for the mills on the lower rivers.” 72 N. H. 214, 215.

Upon a further effort to define and regulate the use of the water in the reservoir, in accordance with the rights of the parties as above determined, the superior court made the following findings and order in the present case, subject to an exception by the defendant Hutchins: The plaintiffs “ are entitled to have the water discharged from the reservoir dam during ten hours of each working day, in sufficient quantity to keep dam C as nearly full as possible, so long as it can be done by not using more than the daily uniform or average flow of water from the first four feet of the reservoir. When the waters of the reservoir fall more than four feet below the top of the reservoir dam, the said Berrys are entitled to have said reservoir dam closed until the water shall accumulate in the reservoir in sufficient quantity to run the mills at dam C for an economical period. This is a reasonable and advantageous use of the first four feet of the water of the reservoir for all of the mills on Smith’s river, considering their relative rights, for the Lake Company, and for the mills on the Winnipiseogee and Merrimack rivers, who are parties to this case, as it equalizes the flow of water from the first four feet of the reservoir and gives to all its daily uniform or average flow. The daily uniform or average flow of the first four feet of the reservoir, basing it upon the average year, is 130,.cubic feet of water per second for ten hours per day; and the'^detendant Hutchins will hereafter discharge the water in accordance with this order until the same is modified or changed.” The court further finds that a draft of water to that extent “ has in the past, and will in the future, draw the water down to the four-foot point during portions of some years”,- but, “taking one year with another,” such draft or flow “ will give all the parties the most water-power from the first four feet of the reservoir, and is the most advantageous use of the same.”

Hutchins now owns the gristmill privilege on dam C described in Horne v. Hutchins, 71 N. H. 128; and the ground of his exception to the foregoing findings and order is that they deprive him of the superior or preferential rights that are attached to that privilege. To run all the wheels at the gristmill at the same time, it requires sixty-nine cubic feet of water per second. The rights attached to the Horne and leather-board mills entitle them respectively to thirteen and seventeen cubic feet of water per second. The sawmill is entitled to the balance of the water pertaining to the entire privilege at dam C after the gristmill, the Horne mill, and the leather-board mill have been supplied according to their *313 rights. 71 N. H. 128. If there were no dam (A) at the outlet of Crooked pond, and the mills at dam C were dependent for power upon the water that naturally flowed into the pond created by that dam, and their respective rights were as now, the gristmill would be entitled to the use of water to the extent of its rights; and if there was any left, the other mills would be entitled to it according to their respective rights. Dam A creates a reservoir in which the water falling in the wet seasons of the year is impounded and held for use in the dry seasons. The reservoir, as it existed at the date of the Goodwin deed, was equivalent in capacity to that portion of the present reservoir which is above a level plane located four feet below the top of the dam; and, as the superior court’s finding' is understood, contained a quantity of water sufficient, when augmented by the ordinary rainfalls from time to time, to supply a draft from it of 130 cubic feet per second during ten hours of each working day in the year. Dam A enables the parties to cause a uniform stream to flow from the reservoir into the pond created by dam C, instead of the natural and variable stream that would exist in its absence. The effect of the reservoir, actually and legally, is to substitute an artificial, uniform stream for the natural, variable stream.

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Related

Newmarket Manufacturing Co. v. Nottingham
168 A. 892 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1933)
Newmarket Mfg. Co. v. Chapman
202 F. 164 (First Circuit, 1913)
Hutchins v. Berry
66 A. 1046 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 550, 73 N.H. 310, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-hutchins-nh-1905.