Stiness, J.
This is a bill to reform a deed and mortgage covering the water rights in the Print Works pond. The complainant claims that its ancestors in title have always been the exclusive owners of the entire water power of the pond ; that the defendants and their ancestors in title have never owned, used or had the' right to use the water of the pond, and, hence, when the farm of Rodney F. Dyer, Senior, was bought, and the mortgage back was given by the complainant’s predecessor in title, it was not intended that the conveyances should cover any rights
other than those of a riparian owner. This is the first issue raised in the case.
The question before us is not the question of title in fact, but that of the intention of the parties in using the term “water rights,” in the agreement and conveyances. The fact of title would undoubtedly throw light iipon the meaning of the parties if it appeared that one party had a clear title to the water power of the pond, and that the other party had never claimed any right therein. A presumption would then arise that the term “water rights” was intended to refer only to ordinary riparian rights, and not to any right in the pond as a source of power. But, on the other hand, although the title to the pond might be in one party, yet if it should appear that the other claimed title therein, an equally strong presumption would arise that the party intended to grant all the right that he claimed ; and so the construction of the deed would depend not so much upon the fact as upon the claim of title. We are not, therefore, called upon to decide the fact of title, for such decision would not be conclusive upon the intention of the parties to the conveyances, unless it was so clear and unequivocal as to exclude all claim of right in the pond itself. It is not of that clear and unequivocal character. If it was necessary to decide the question of fact, we should find it difficult to say that the complainant’s exclusive title to the whole pond is established beyond question. Certainly, the pond originated with mutual rights in the owners on both sides. But let us assume that the Spragues were, at the time of the agreement, the sole owners of the pond. ' We then find that they and Dyer, opposite owners on the pond, had controversies about their respective rights ; certainly as to putting on dashboards ; as to repairing the westerly part of the dam, and as to taking-ice from the westerly part of the pond, beyond the centre line. Mr. Amasa Sprague testifies that these controversies related only to flowage and the right to enter upon Dyer’s land ; while testimony offered by the respondents shows that Dyer claimed to be the owner of the pond to the middle of the channel, and to the same extent an owner of the dam.
As there has been nothing on Dyer’s side requiring power for many years, the controversy would not be likely to draw that point in question, and it is therefore probable, as Mr. Sprague says, that their talk was about flowage and the right to enter on Dyer’s land, at the west end of the dam, to repair the abutment. But, in 1870, Dyer filed a bill in equity against the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Co., alleging that he was the owner of the land to the middle of the river whereon the defendant had a dam and pond and the right to flow to a certain extent, and that he had long enjoyed certain water rights adjoining said pond, and was the owner of the soil under the water of said pond and river to the middle thereof, and had the right to have free access to said pond and river ; that the defendant, to deprive him of the use and benefit
of said tuater
and of lands adjoining said water, was about to build a new dam which would raise the water of the pond, for which Dyer prayed an injunction. Exactly what Dyer claimed by this bill is not very clear.. But while it alleges injury to his rights adjoining the pond and the ownership of the soil under it, it also, impliedly at least, makes claim to the use and benefit of the water. The bill was not answered, and it resulted in the purchase of Dyer’s land under the agreement and conveyances in question. The agreement was drawn very carefully and very comprehensively. It was evidently intended to cover all rights, both in the land and in the pond, and provided for immediate entry, after the execution of the deed, for alteration of the dam to enable the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Co. £ £ to use the water rights herein agreed to be granted.” This clause was construed in the case of
Dyer
v.
Cranston Print Works,
in a rescript
filed July 7, 1893,
to mean ‘ ‘ not merely the use of the water for domestic or farm purposes, but water rights connected with the dams, or rather to be used in connection with the dams when the requisite alterations of them had been made, or, in other words, the right to use the water for furnishing power. ” We see no reason to doubt the correctness of that construction. The terms of the agreement about water rights would be quite unnecessary if they embraced only riparian rights, for, of course, Dyer could not claim these after he had sold the land. They would vest in the grantee under his deed. We cannot think that so accurate a conveyancer as the one who drew the papers, who was also the counsel for the defendant in that case, would have used such terms simply out of abundant- caution. It seems more reasonable that they were intended to cover rights in the water power which might exist or be claimed apart from any title in the land covered by the dam or pond.
Matteson
v.
Wilbur,
11 R. I. 545.
However the Spragues may have regarded such a claim of right, and however the fact of the existence of the right may have been, it seems to be clear that the agreement and conveyances were intended to cover them. If this be so, we cannot reform the instruments on the ground of mutual mistake. It is not enough to show that one party intended something different. The power of the court is only to make an instrument what both parties intended it to be, when the mistake is clearly and unequivocally proved.
Allen
v.
Brown,
6 R. I. 386. Nor is it enough to show that Dyer had no. title to convey. If he thought he had, and his deed was drawn accordingly, we cannot say that he would have taken the mortgage as security without including in it all the rights which he supposed he owned. If it was not intended to mortgage back rights in the pond, because none were actually conveyed, the mortgage could easily have been drawn to ex-
elude them. Even without the preceding agreement and deed, the owner of the pond had the right to include in the mortgage an interest in the pond as a source of power, and there is nothing to show that Dyer did not understand that it was so included.
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Stiness, J.
This is a bill to reform a deed and mortgage covering the water rights in the Print Works pond. The complainant claims that its ancestors in title have always been the exclusive owners of the entire water power of the pond ; that the defendants and their ancestors in title have never owned, used or had the' right to use the water of the pond, and, hence, when the farm of Rodney F. Dyer, Senior, was bought, and the mortgage back was given by the complainant’s predecessor in title, it was not intended that the conveyances should cover any rights
other than those of a riparian owner. This is the first issue raised in the case.
The question before us is not the question of title in fact, but that of the intention of the parties in using the term “water rights,” in the agreement and conveyances. The fact of title would undoubtedly throw light iipon the meaning of the parties if it appeared that one party had a clear title to the water power of the pond, and that the other party had never claimed any right therein. A presumption would then arise that the term “water rights” was intended to refer only to ordinary riparian rights, and not to any right in the pond as a source of power. But, on the other hand, although the title to the pond might be in one party, yet if it should appear that the other claimed title therein, an equally strong presumption would arise that the party intended to grant all the right that he claimed ; and so the construction of the deed would depend not so much upon the fact as upon the claim of title. We are not, therefore, called upon to decide the fact of title, for such decision would not be conclusive upon the intention of the parties to the conveyances, unless it was so clear and unequivocal as to exclude all claim of right in the pond itself. It is not of that clear and unequivocal character. If it was necessary to decide the question of fact, we should find it difficult to say that the complainant’s exclusive title to the whole pond is established beyond question. Certainly, the pond originated with mutual rights in the owners on both sides. But let us assume that the Spragues were, at the time of the agreement, the sole owners of the pond. ' We then find that they and Dyer, opposite owners on the pond, had controversies about their respective rights ; certainly as to putting on dashboards ; as to repairing the westerly part of the dam, and as to taking-ice from the westerly part of the pond, beyond the centre line. Mr. Amasa Sprague testifies that these controversies related only to flowage and the right to enter upon Dyer’s land ; while testimony offered by the respondents shows that Dyer claimed to be the owner of the pond to the middle of the channel, and to the same extent an owner of the dam.
As there has been nothing on Dyer’s side requiring power for many years, the controversy would not be likely to draw that point in question, and it is therefore probable, as Mr. Sprague says, that their talk was about flowage and the right to enter on Dyer’s land, at the west end of the dam, to repair the abutment. But, in 1870, Dyer filed a bill in equity against the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Co., alleging that he was the owner of the land to the middle of the river whereon the defendant had a dam and pond and the right to flow to a certain extent, and that he had long enjoyed certain water rights adjoining said pond, and was the owner of the soil under the water of said pond and river to the middle thereof, and had the right to have free access to said pond and river ; that the defendant, to deprive him of the use and benefit
of said tuater
and of lands adjoining said water, was about to build a new dam which would raise the water of the pond, for which Dyer prayed an injunction. Exactly what Dyer claimed by this bill is not very clear.. But while it alleges injury to his rights adjoining the pond and the ownership of the soil under it, it also, impliedly at least, makes claim to the use and benefit of the water. The bill was not answered, and it resulted in the purchase of Dyer’s land under the agreement and conveyances in question. The agreement was drawn very carefully and very comprehensively. It was evidently intended to cover all rights, both in the land and in the pond, and provided for immediate entry, after the execution of the deed, for alteration of the dam to enable the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Co. £ £ to use the water rights herein agreed to be granted.” This clause was construed in the case of
Dyer
v.
Cranston Print Works,
in a rescript
filed July 7, 1893,
to mean ‘ ‘ not merely the use of the water for domestic or farm purposes, but water rights connected with the dams, or rather to be used in connection with the dams when the requisite alterations of them had been made, or, in other words, the right to use the water for furnishing power. ” We see no reason to doubt the correctness of that construction. The terms of the agreement about water rights would be quite unnecessary if they embraced only riparian rights, for, of course, Dyer could not claim these after he had sold the land. They would vest in the grantee under his deed. We cannot think that so accurate a conveyancer as the one who drew the papers, who was also the counsel for the defendant in that case, would have used such terms simply out of abundant- caution. It seems more reasonable that they were intended to cover rights in the water power which might exist or be claimed apart from any title in the land covered by the dam or pond.
Matteson
v.
Wilbur,
11 R. I. 545.
However the Spragues may have regarded such a claim of right, and however the fact of the existence of the right may have been, it seems to be clear that the agreement and conveyances were intended to cover them. If this be so, we cannot reform the instruments on the ground of mutual mistake. It is not enough to show that one party intended something different. The power of the court is only to make an instrument what both parties intended it to be, when the mistake is clearly and unequivocally proved.
Allen
v.
Brown,
6 R. I. 386. Nor is it enough to show that Dyer had no. title to convey. If he thought he had, and his deed was drawn accordingly, we cannot say that he would have taken the mortgage as security without including in it all the rights which he supposed he owned. If it was not intended to mortgage back rights in the pond, because none were actually conveyed, the mortgage could easily have been drawn to ex-
elude them. Even without the preceding agreement and deed, the owner of the pond had the right to include in the mortgage an interest in the pond as a source of power, and there is nothing to show that Dyer did not understand that it was so included. For nearly twenty years the deeds remained on record unquestioned ; the Print Works estate was sold and conveyed to the Union Company, to the Cranston Bleaching, Dyeing and Printing Company and to the complainant, by deeds, the first subject to the Dyer mortgage, and the last two, after the foreclosure of the- mortgage, bounding on the same division line as those of Dyer’s deed of 1872, and limiting the water rights to those appurtenant to the estate conveyed ; but during all this time there was no effort to correct the mistake, if one had been made. While it is undoubtedly true that the owners of the Print Works estate may have supposed that they owned all the water of the pond, still if a mistake had been made in Dyer’s conveyances the fact must have been known, for all the parties to them were then living, and, upon the assumption of a mistake, it is almost incredible that they would have been allowed to lie with no effort to correct it. We feel obliged to hold that the complainant does not make a case for relief upon the ground of mutual mistake.
It is further claimed that the complainant has an easement in the water of the pond appurtenant to its estate, which did not pass under the general language of the mortgage. This is not a question which arises upon a bill to reform the mortgage. The question was considered in
Dyer
v.
Cranston Print Works,
17 R. I. 774, and the particular clause of the mortgage was construed in the subsequent rescript in that case. Undoubtedly, the easement might have been reserved, expressly or impliedly, but the question now between the parties is that of the legal effect of an express grant. We do not see that it can enter into the decision of this case, unless it should be to say that the mortgage does not need to be reformed because it covers no rights in the pond, and also that in spite of the grant, the whole pond is appurtenant to the Print Works estate, and so impliedly reserved out of the
grant. That point, however, we consider to have been decided in the previous suit, as above stated.
James M. Ripley & Joseph C. Ely,
for complainant.
O. Frank Parkhurst,
for respondent.