Cole v. Bradbury

29 A. 1097, 86 Me. 380, 1894 Me. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 2, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 A. 1097 (Cole v. Bradbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Bradbury, 29 A. 1097, 86 Me. 380, 1894 Me. LEXIS 39 (Me. 1894).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is a bill in equity brought to restrain the defendants from severing the supply pipe connecting a certain aqueduct and spring of water in the town of Norway with the dwelling-house of the plaintiff, Horace Cole, who claims that the right to take and use water from the spring, in common with the defendants, by means of the aqueduct, was acquired by [382]*382prescription by his predecessors in title, and passed to him as appurtenant to the premises by deed of November 1, 1873. In the amended bill his three children become co-plaintiffs, claiming an interest in the aqueduct as residuary legatees of Adeline C. Denison ; and a further claim is also set up in favor of Horace Cole as a grantee of other residuary legatees of the same testator.

The defendants claim the exclusive ownership of the aqueduct and deny that either Horace Cole, or his co-plaintiffs, ever acquired any such right by grant, prescription or otherwise. The case comes to this court on report.

I. The claim asserted in favor of the plaintiff, Horace Cole, that a prescriptive right to use the water from this aqueduct was acquired by his predecessor in title and passed to him by deed, will be first considered.

The testimony respecting the arrangement under which the aqueduct was originally constructed is somewhat conflicting. It appears that the aqueduct was laid as early as the year 1852, and that the spring in question was located on land then owned by Adna C. Denison. The defendants claim that Adna C. and his brother, Isaac A. Denison, built the aqueduct primarily for the accommodation oftheir dwelling-houses at their joint expense ; and deny that any other person contributed anything whatever in the construction of it, or acquired any interest in it, or absolute right to use water from it. They concede, however, that there was "an understanding with Moses Bartlett,” the predecessor in title of Horace Cole, "that when there was plenty of water he could use some by paying a portion of the expense of keeping it in repair;” but "when the water was short” they "had the right to cut it off at any time.” On the other,.hand, the plaintiffs claim that Bartlett was one of the original builders and proprietors of the aqueduct, and enjoyed the use of it as one of the owners during his occupancy of the premises until the conveyance to Judge Virgin, June 4, 1853 ; that Judge Virgin in like •manner continued to enjoy the right to use the water from that time until August 12, 1872, as a legal appurtenance of his estate ; and that Pamelia Cole, his successor in title, thereafter continued to use it as a matter of right until the conveyance to [383]*383Horace Cole in 1873. It is, therefore, contended that even if Bartlett’s interest was not an easement which had become legally attached to the premises when he conveyed to Judge Virgin in 1853, it unquestionably ripened into a legal right by adverse use on the part of Judge Virgin and Mrs. Cole for more than twenty years prior to November, 1873, and passed by deed of that date to Horace Cole as appurtenant to the estate. Finally, it is said that Horace Cole continued to use the water as of his own right, without interruption or threat of interruption, from 1873 until this controversy arose in 1891; so that there was uninterrupted adverse use of the aqueduct by Cole and his predecessors for a period of thirty-nine years.

It is now settled law that the uninterrupted adverse use of the water of an artificial aqueduct for twenty years is sufficient to create a prescriptive right to the enjoyment of it to the extent of such use in the same manner as would have been the case if the water had flowed in a natural channel. Tinkham v. Arnold, 3 Maine, 123; Watkins v. Peck, 13 N. H. 370; Wash, on Eas. 430; Dority v. Dunning, 78 Maine, 381. And the term of enjoyment requisite for the prescription is deemed to be uninterrupted when it is continued from ancestor to heirs, and from seller to buyer. In other words, the several periods of enjoyment of an easement by successive occupants holding by privity of estate may be counted together to make up the requisite twenty years. All that would be required by the possessor would be evidence that the possession had been legally continued from one owner to the other. Wash. Eas. 176 ; Gould on Water’s, § 335; Leonard v. Leonard, 7 Allen, 280; Sargent v. Ballard, 9 Pick. 256. It is also an established rule of conveyancing that the word "appurtenance”in the habendum of a deed " will not be construed to convey anything except what was legally appurtenant to the land in the hands of the grantor, and, therefore, will not be extended so as to convey an easement in the land of another, which by reason of not having ripened into a legal right had not become legally attached to the premises conveyed, unless accompanied by proper words describing it and showing the intention of the grantor to pass [384]*384it. Swazey v. Brooks, 34 Vt. 451 ; Spaulding v. Abbott, 55 N. H. 423. But when an easement, although not originally-belonging to an estate, has become appurtenant to it either by-grant or prescription, a conveyance of that estate will carry with it such easement whether mentioned in the deed or not, although it may not be necessary to the enjoyment of the estate by the grantee. Wash. on Eas. 40 and authorities cited; Dority v. Dunning, 78 Maine, 384.

In the case at bar, it is unnecessary to consider whether Bartlett’s interest in 1852 had become legally attached to the estate, or whether it was only an inchoate prescriptive right at that date ; for while the question is not entirely free from difficulty, there is on the whole a decided preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiffs’ contention that, after the deed to Judge Virgin in 1853, there was an uninterrupted adverse enjoyment of the easement for more than twenty years, until the conveyance to Horace Cole in 1873, when, having matured in a legal right and become appurtenant to the estate, it passed by the deed to Cole. It is conceded that the Bartlett house received a supply of water from this aqueduct without interruption for thirty-nine years. It is not in controversy that prior to the pui-chase of O’Brien in 1876, a period of some twenty-four years, no rent was paid for the water, and it is not established by competent evidence that rent was ever paid for water from this aqueduct by any owner or occupant of the Bartlett premises. Mrs. Bartlett, the wife of Moses Bartlett, testifies that her husband and herself were in the occupation of the premises from 1849 to the time of the conveyance to Judge Virgin in 1853; that in 1851, or 1852, she heard Isaac A. Denison propose to her husband that they should, " take water in logs from the spring on Adna C. Denison’s land and bring it to Mr. Bartlett’s and his house for the benefit of both of them ; that both Mr. Bartlett and Mr. Denison said they would do it, and Mr. Bartlett said he would survey the line and superintend the work; that she understood that they had a right to take all the water they needed from that spring, and that they should share jointly all the expenses arising from it; that no water rent was ever paid by them or demanded of them, [385]*385and that she never heard their right to take water from the aqueduct denied or questioned by any one prior to the time of giving her deposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 A. 1097, 86 Me. 380, 1894 Me. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-bradbury-me-1894.