Cromwell v. . Selden

3 N.Y. 253
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 N.Y. 253 (Cromwell v. . Selden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cromwell v. . Selden, 3 N.Y. 253 (N.Y. 1850).

Opinion

Harris, J.

Rathbone, at the time of his conveyance to Marvin, was the owner of the entire water power in question. He was entitled to its unrestricted use. The plaintiff, as his grantee, has succeeded to all his rights, except such as he had granted to Marvin, and those are vested in the defendants. The single question now presented, relates to the„extent of the rights of the parties respectively, to the use of the water, and this depends upon the construction to be given to the terms found in the grant from Rathbone to Marvin. The defendants are entitled to “ water sufficient to keep a saw mill in operation at all times when there is more than is wanted to drive a grist mill with three run of stone, and one set of carding machines, and picker, and fulling mill, and other machinery for dressing cloth.” The grantor reserved to himself the first use of the water to the extent required to drive a grist mill, &c. The grantee only acquired a right to use a limited quantity of water, and that only when it was not wanted for the prior use reserved. Was that prior use to be limited to the particular kinds of machinery specified in the reservation, or were the terms employed as a mode of determining the quantity of water the prior use of which the grantor reserved to himself? In other words, was it intended that the grantor should be restricted, in the use of the water, to the machinery to which it was then applied, or might he, at his pleasure, apply the same quantity of water to any other machinery'?

It is a general rule of construction, applicable to grants of water powers, that when the question arises whether, by a grant of a sufficient quantity of water to propel a particular kind of machinery, the terms employed are used merely to indicate the quantity of water intended to be granted, or to restrict the use of the water to the machinery specified, the former construction is to be favored, when the language of the grant will admit of such construction. The grounds upon which this rule rests are *256 twofold. First, it is more beneficial to the grantee, without being more onerous to the grantor, that he should be permitted to apply the water granted to any machinery he pleases, not requiring a greater amount of power than that specified in the grant. Secondly, it is supported by public policy. The interests of the community will generally be best promoted, by allowing an unrestricted application of the power to such machinery as will be most profitable ,to the owner. (Ashley v. Pease, 18 Pick. 268.)

There is another rule of construction equally well settled, of which the defendants claim the benefit. It is, that in every grant, it being the act of the grantor, all doubtful expressions are to be taken in a sense most favorable to the grantee. Where terms are employed which, unexplained, are susceptible of two constructions, if the intent of the parties is not otherwise apparent, that construction is to be adopted, which will operate most to the advantage of the grantee.

In this case I think the most that can be said in favor of the construction for which the defendants contend is, that the terms of the reservation will bear that construction. They certainly do not demand it. That we may the better determine what the parties intended by the reservation in the grant, let it be supposed that Rathbone, the original owner of the whole power, had first conveyed to the plaintiff “ so much water as is sufficient to drive a grist mill with three run of stone, and one set of carding machines and 'picker and fulling mill, and other machinery for dressing cloth and then had conveyed to the defendants “ water sufficient to keep a saw mill in operation at all times when there is more than is wanted to drive a grist mill” &-c. Would any one doubt that in each case the parties intended to determine the quantity oipower to which the grantee should be entitled, without reference to the use which should be made of it? Rathbone was willing to dispose of a certain portion of the water power of which he was the owner. In doing so, however, he would not deprive himself of the quantity which he himself desired to use. How should this be done ? How should the quantity of power to be granted, arid the quantity *257 to be reserved be defined ? There was perhaps no other way, at any rate none so practicable, as to say that the power reserved should be sufficient to drive certain well known machinery, and that the power granted should be sufficient to propel other machinery equally well known. By such a standard the quantity intended to be reserved, and the quantity intended to be granted, could be most easily ascertained. There is nothing in the terms of the grant itself, or in the situation of the parties, so far as it appears, from which it can be inferred that either party to the grant desired to restrict the other in the mode of using the amount of power to which he would be entitled. Much less is there any thing to show that the grantor himself, in reserving the prior use of a certain portion of the power, intended to limit himself in the exercise of the right he before enjoyed, of applying that power in such manner as he might deem most to his advantage.

The construction thus proposed to be given to the grant in question, is supported by all the adjudged cases with which I have met. Bigelow v. Battel, (15 Mass. 313,) is not distinguishable in principle from this case. There the plaintiffs being the owners of the entire water power of the Charles river, at Natick, granted to the defendants the privilege of taking from their dam a specified quantity of water, “ except when the quantity of water is so small as not to be sufficient to carry theplaintiffs’ grist mill and a cotton factory which may be erected, with . not more than 5000 spindles? Instead of erecting a cotton factory, the plaintiffs built a paper mill. The action was brought for taking more water from the dam than by their lease the defendants had a right to take. For the defense it was insisted, that the water power reserved for the plaintiffs was for the use of a cotton mill containing 5000 spindles. Until such a mill should be erected, the reservation was not to take effect. Being an exception in a grant, it should be taken most strongly against the grantor. It was no part of the contract, that the plaintiffs should have a right to the water for the use of a paper mill. But it was held, that the right reserved did not limit the use of the water to a cotton factory; that the true intent of the reser *258 vation was that water should, at all times, be left sufficient to carry 5000 spindles. “ It can not be imagined,” say the court, “ that the plaintiffs would limit and restrict the use of their own privilege, nor could it be of any importance to the defendants, when the contract was made, to what use that part of the water should be applied to which they had no claim.”

In Johnson v. Rand, (6 N. Hamp.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cromwell-v-selden-ny-1850.