Carleton v. Redington

21 N.H. 291
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 N.H. 291 (Carleton v. Redington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Carleton v. Redington, 21 N.H. 291 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

Woods, J.

The first question arises upon the ruling of the court, that the parties might fix a limit to their respective claims, different from that which might be considered the true con[301]*301struction of the deed from the plaintiff to Ely, Earr, and Redington. This ruling was made upon objection to the competency of parol proof of an agreement by the parties, upon a monument, to which the defendants might raise their dam, and which would give the grantees a right to raise the water higher than they could have done by the deed. The question is, whether the ruling, admitting the evidence, was correct. The agreement was, in effect, that the water might be raised upon the premises and works of the plaintiff, to any height to which a dam of given elevation would raise it in any and every state of the water; although it would thus be raised higher, and would flow the lands and works of the plaintiff to a greater extent than was contemplated by the grant. The effect of the proof of the agreement, if it can have effect at all, is to enlarge the grant, in fact, by a parol agreement. The ruling admitted the evidence, notwithstanding it must have that effect. And the question is, whether a parol agreement can have effect as a contract enlarging the rights of the parties, or as conclusive evidence of the existing rights, and of the extent of the existing claims of the parties. It is believed that no case can be found, giving any countenance to the idea that a parol agreement can be allowed to have the effect, directly, to enlarge a grant which is required to be made by deed. If such agreement can affect the grant at all, it must be as matter of evidence of the extent of the respective rights of the parties under the deed, which is conclusive, and the contrary whereof cannot be shown by other proofs. That parolagreements have been allowed to have that effect in regard to divisional lines of the lands of adjoining owners in this State, where an agreement has been made, and in conformity therewith, such adjoining owners have erected monuments upon the line, and have gone into actual occupation of the lands on both sides, or where, as it is termed, the agreement has been'executed, is not to be denied. Sawyer v. Felton, 6 N. H. Rep. 107; Gray v. Berry, 9 N. H. Rep. 473. The same doctrine is holden in a similar case in Pennsylvania. Ebert v. Wood, 1 Binney, 215. A similar principle is established by the supreme court of New York. Clark v. Wethey, 19 Wend. 320. [302]*302It seems, however, that the courts of New York are not inclined to extend the principle, but to limit it, as in the ease referred to. Rockwell v. Adams, 16 Wend. 285. But, in the States of Maine and Massachusetts a different doctrine prevails. It has been decided that such agreement, and actual location of a line between owners of adjoining lands, are strong evidence of the accuracy of the line thus established, although not conclusive so as to prevent either party from showing that it was settled erroneously. Gove v. Richardson, 4 Greenl. 327; Whitney v. Holmes, 15 Mass. 153. The decisions, then, upon this point, are not agreed; and "upon examining them, and the reasons assigned for them, we are not inclined to extend the principle established in this State beyond the cases in which it has already been applied, and certainly not to cases where there is no ambiguity in the terms of the deed, and no difficulty or doubt as to the extent of the rights of the parties under the deed.

Where the terms of the deed are not ambiguous, and the extent of the rights of the parties, under the deed, are plain and evident, to hold that a parol agreement shall in fact enlarge the rights of either party beyond those given by the deed, under the name of conclusive evidence, is nothing more or less than to give such parol agreement the effect of a grant of real estate. A doctrine having any such effect, is in direct contravention of the' statute of frauds, and cannot be sustained. That an agreement of the parties should have the effect of evidence, even of strong evidence, of the accuracy of the line agreed upon between adjoining, owners, is an admissible doctrine; but that it should have the effect, when founded in error in fact, and it is so shown, to enlarge a grant required to be by deed or other writing, is a doctrine which does not approve itself to the judgment by force of any very obvious and controlling reason, or any inherent principle of justice upon which it is seen to rest. We are not, then, prepared to carry the doctrine of the cases referred to, in this State, beyond the cases in which it has been applied, or cases in which the reason for the doctrine is seen .to be at least equally cogent and convincing.

The case under consideration is not one of an agreement upon [303]*303a divisional line between lands of adjoining owners. The deed does not look to any particular divisional line, or to the establishment of any such line, as forming the limit of the grant, or of the rights of the parties under the grant. But it looks to the practical operation of the water by means of a dam, to be erected by the defendants upon lands of their own, upon the machinery at the mills of the plaintiff, at his mill-dam above the contemplated dam of the defendants, as limiting and determining the extent of the grant and the rights of the parties under it. And it looks, also, to such operation, for that purpose, in all the varying states of the water contemplated by the deed. If any other reason were necessary to be assigned why the doctrine contended for should not be applied to a case like the present, than that it allows of the enlargement of a grant by parol, in contravention of the statute, it will be found, we think, in the fact that the principle must be applied in all cases, and between all parties alike; while at the same time, although it may be that persons learned and skilled in the science of hydraulics might, upon an investigation and a scientific calculation, determine, with some degree of certainty, the height of a dam, by means of which the operation of the water upon the machinery would not be injurious, still, the requisite degree of skill would not be found to exist in any but a very limited portion of such persons as are likely to be parties to conveyances of water-rights, such as are in- controversy in the present case. Much wrong and injustice would therefore be likely to be accomplished by the application of such a doctrine to such a case ; and much more, we think, than by denying its application. And besides, the denial has the advantage of being sustained by principle, and of being in conformity with the provisions of the law.

The right granted is a right to raise the water ; but not so as to interfere with the operation of the machinery of the plaintiff at the mill above, except in extremely high water in times of freshet. The right claimed under the agreement, is a right so to raise the water as to interfere with the operation of the machinery, and beyond the grant. And it is conceded to be so. An agreement, in any ease, to affect the rights of the parties, even as to [304]*304divisional lines, must be intended to be an agreement fixing upon tbe actual, true line, and not intended to change or enlarge the grant. This position is conceded in all the cases.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.H. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carleton-v-redington-nhsuperct-1850.