Bradley v. Warner

41 A. 564, 21 R.I. 36, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 28, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 A. 564 (Bradley v. Warner) 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
Bradley v. Warner, 41 A. 564, 21 R.I. 36, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 4 (R.I. 1898).

Opinion

Matteson, C. J.

This is a bill for an injunction to restrain the respondents from polluting the complainant’s ice-pond, and for an account to be taken of the damages suffered by the complainant from the pollution of the pond in the past.

On October 23, 1872, Lysander Flagg, the owner of the land in East Providence platted as the Medbery and Lawton Plat, and as the Lawton Farm Plat in Riverside, by his deed of that date conveyed to George Smith, as trustee for the grantor and others, the lots numbered 333, 334, 335, 336, on the Lewis Farm Plat, and lots numbered 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 131, 133, and 134 on the Medbery and Lawton Plat, together with the ice-house then building on lots 81 and 82; “ also the exclusive privilege of cutting and taking ice from the artificial *38 pond of water made by building a dam by said grantee on or between lots numbered 245, 247, 249, 251, and 254, and lots, numbered 246, 248, 250, 252, and 255, as said lots are laid out and described on the aforesaid Plat of Villa Lots on the Medbery and Lawton Farms near Cedar Grove, as long as said pond shall exist, reserving, however, to the present owner or future owners of the aforesaid dam, and to their heirs and assigns forever, the right of flowage upon or over any or all of the afore-granted lots, and the further right to draw the water from said pond whenever it may be necessary.” All the subsequent conveyances through which the complainant derives title to his land, including the deed to him dated July 26, 1890, expressly include the ice privilege granted in the deed from Flagg to Smith, trustee, as above set forth.

About sixteen or seventeen years before the filing of the bill, the dam referred to in the deed from Flagg to Smith, trustee, having been carried away, the Riverside Ice Company, a predecessor in title of the complainant, proceeded up the brook about five hundred feet to a point on Fenner avenue, a platted street which has never been graded or accepted as a public highway, where an ancient bridge, part of an old driftway, crossed the brook, and there constructed a new dam, without the leave or license of the then owners of the lots on the Medberry and Lawton Plat abutting on Fenner avenue in that part of it where the dam was built, and against the objection and protest of George M. Johnson, the owner of the lots on which was subsequently erected a wing wall to sustain the dam. The rollway of the new dam is two inches lower than the rollway of the old dam, so that the pond raised by the new'dam does not flow back up the stream so far as the pond raised by the old dam.

The respondents each derive title to the lots owned by them respectively through mesne conveyances from Flagg, the deeds of these lots having been executed subsequently to the recording of the deed from him to Smith, trustee of the premises which the complainant' owns. The lots of the respondents are above the sites of both the old and the new dam, on opposite sides of the pond raised by the new dam. *39 The sources of pollution complained of are a privy and sink-drain-pipe on the Warner property, and a drain-pipe on the Peck property placed there before the occupation of the present tenant of the latter property began.

(1) The principal question which has been raised is as to the nature of the ice privilege conveyed by the deed from Flagg to Smith as trustee. The respondents contend that the grant was merely a license to cut the ice, limited to the existence of the particular pond raised by the dam to be built by the grantee as stated in the deed; that, that dam having been partially destroyed by the elements and rendered useless in 1881 or 1882, it was competent for Flagg to revoke the license and extinguish the right, which he did by destroying the remainder pf the dam, removing the stone, timbers, &c., and by subsequently conveying some of the lots, on which the dam had been located, without reservation and free from encumbrance. The complainant, on the other hand, contends that the language is sufficient, by implication, at least, to create an easement in fee in favor of the grantee to have the lots conveyed to him flowed to the extent covered by the pond raised by the dam; since the privilege of cutting and taking ice from the pond clearly could not be enjoyed without the raising and maintaining of a pond on which, the ice was to form, and that the grant of a thing carries with it all things as included without which the thing granted cannot be enjoyed. And he further contends that the words “as long as said pond shall exist ” cannot operate to cut down the easement which is annexed to the fee in the lots and restrict it. to the pond formed by the dam originally erected; that, if such had been the intention, the language used would have been, doubtless, “ as long as said dam shall exist;” that the intention evidently was to grant the ice privilege for as long a time as in the nature of things it could be enjoyed.

We are inclined to the view taken by the complainant. The conveyance of the lots with the ice-house being in fee, with authority to the grantee to enter on the land of the grantor and erect a dam for the purpose of creating the pond on which to cut the ice, gives rise to a presumption that the *40 easement to have the dam continued and the lots flowed was to be co-extensive with the estate in the lots, and hence that it was not to be restricted merely to the life of the-dam, but that the grantee and his successors in title should have the right to maintain the dam, and for that purpose to enter upon the land of the grantor to repair or rebuild it when necessary. Huntington v. Asher, 96 N. Y. 604, was a case similar in this respect to the present. That was a case, not of a strict easement, but of a profit a prendre, the pond on which the ice privilege was to be exercised not belonging to the owner of the privilege. It was held that, though the owners of the pond were not bound to maintain the dam, they were not authorized to destroy it or prevent its repair, and that the grant of the privilege carried with it, and gave to the owner of the estate to which the privilege was appurtenant, the right to repair and rebuild the dam.

(2) We do not think that the change in the location of the dam, so long as the area flowed by the new dam is no greater than that flowed by the old, is a fact of which the respondents can avail themselves as a defence. In the absence of any injurious consequences to the respondents resulting from the change, the change, so far as they are concerned, is immaterial, and does not have the effect to destroy or extinguish the easement. In Kidd v. Laird, 15 Cal. 161, it was held that one entitled to divert a given quantity of water of a stream had the right to change the point of diversion at pleasure, if the rights of other’s were not injuriously affected by the change. The court, after citing authorities, remarks : “These authorities show conclusively that in all cases the effect of the change on the rights of others'is the controlling consideration, and that in the absence of injurious consequences to others any change which the party chooses to make is legal and proper.” In Cary v. Daniels, 8 Met.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 564, 21 R.I. 36, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-warner-ri-1898.