Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co. v. Jefferson Power Co.

179 A.D. 332, 166 N.Y.S. 311, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7372
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 3, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 179 A.D. 332 (Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co. v. Jefferson Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co. v. Jefferson Power Co., 179 A.D. 332, 166 N.Y.S. 311, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7372 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Foote, J.:

By the judgment appealed from it has been adjudged that the right of the defendant the Jefferson Power Company to take and use the waters of the Black river from the dam at Dexter is as follows: “ To use as much water from said pond as will pass through an aperture three feet square under all the head that can be obtained, to be taken from the south end of the said north dam through a well secured and tight flume or bulkhead, the aperture to be a standard rectangular aperture, made of metal plate not more than two inches thick, having square edges which edges shall be at least twelve inches distant from all artificial and natural objects, except water, the top and bottom edges thereof being set horizontally; said aperture shall be provided with a gate by which it can be securely closed, which gate shall have an indicator showing whether it is open or closed, easily observed at the surface, at or near the point where said aperture is placed, such aperture to open into a well secured and tight flume or bulkhead.”

The right so adjudicated had its origin on January 1, 1842, in a deed from the so-called Dexter Village Company to John E. Brown, the Jefferson Power Company being the present owner through mesne conveyances from Brown. By the deed the right is described as a right “ To use 9 cubic feet of water or so much as will pass through an aperture 3 feet square under all the head that can be obtained to be taken from the south end of the dam across the north channel of the Black River [334]*334through a well secured and tight flume or bulkhead and used upon the premises hereby granted.” By the deed this right was also stated to be upon an equal footing with the rights this day granted ” to three other persons, one to use eighteen cubic feet of water, and two others, each to use nine cubic feet of water to be taken from the same dam.

It is contended by the Jefferson Power Company on this appeal that the referee has erroneously construed the grant, and that it was intended to convey the right to the use for power purposes of a column of water three feet square under all the head that can be obtained, to be taken through a tight flume or bulkhead and not to be measured through an aperture; in other words, that it is entitled to use the full theoretical discharge through an aperture three feet square to be measured by the discharge of its water wheels.

It appeared without substantial dispute that by the discharge through such an aperture as the referee has prescribed with thin square edges only about sixty-two per cent of the theoretical discharge can be obtained because of the contraction of jet which that form of aperture produces.

The referee, however, held the parties concluded by a judgment rendered in 1898 in an action brought by this plaintiff against the then owners of all water powers upon this dam, including the St. Lawrence Paper Company which then owned the rights now held by the Jefferson Power Company. By the judgment in that case it was held that the St. Lawrence Paper Company’s right was to use as much water from said pond as will pass through an aperture three feet square, under all the head that can be obtained, to be taken from the south end of the north dam aforesaid, through a well secured and tight flume or bulkhead.” It was the opinion of the referee that this was, in effect, a holding that the aperture furnished the means of ascertaining what was intended to be conveyed and what the grantee was entitled to receive, and that this judgment was final and conclusive upon that point.

I think the learned referee was correct in that conclusion. The question was directly involved upon the pleadings in that case. The complaint alleged the water right of the St. Lawrence Paper Company to be “ so much as will pass through an aperture three feet square, that is three feet by [335]*335three feet,” and that said company had been taking its water through greater apertures and in greater quantities. Seine of the defendants allege in their answers that the St. Lawrence Paper Company’s right was limited to so much water as would pass through an aperture three feet by three feet and that it had been using larger quantities to their prejudice and asked affirmative relief, that the respective rights of the defendants as between themselves be ascertained and determined and that the St. Lawrence Paper Company and certain other defendants be restrained from taking water to which they were not entitled.

The decree in that case did not, however, expressly require the St. Lawrence Paper Company to thereafter take its water through an aperture at the dam, nor was one installed at any time either before or after the decree prior to the commencement of this action.

In the present case it was the contention of the plaintiff that notwithstanding that decree the Jefferson Power Company was taldng from the common dam more water than it was entitled to use under said decree. The complaint alleges that said company claiming the right thereto is using several times as much water as will pass through an aperture three feet square under the head obtainable and is doing the same under claim of right.” Also, That it is impossible in the absence of any accurate measurement to be made by plaintiff to ascertain the amount of such excess of use by the said defendants as the water is not drawn through apertures of prescribed dimensions, but is used by the defendants at will in large quantities and in a manner that the plaintiff cannot accurately observe.” The referee has found that at the time this action was begun each of the defendants was drawing water from the pond in excess of its rights and was in the attitude of claiming that it did not exceed its rights.

Under these circumstances, I think the referee was justified in prescribing and requiring the defendant to use some device for accurately measuring the quantity of water it was using, which could be inspected by plaintiff and others interested.

The question is whether the rights of the defendant Jefferson Power Company have been infringed or improperly limited by the device required by this judgment. ......

[336]*336The contention of the defendant is that the measurement of water for power purposes through an aperture is unusual, impracticable and that it results in a loss of power and an unreasonable and unnecessary restriction upon the development and use of its water privilege.

This, I think, depends upon what its water privilege is. If it is limited, as I think the referee has rightly held, to the quantity that will pass through an aperture of given dimensions under a varying head, then apparently the most certain and definite measurement would be by means of such an aperture installed at the dam. The grant is not capable of interpretation in terms of a constant flow of a given amount of water, or in a certain number of cubic feet per second, as might be the case if the grant fixed a definite head. The mesne head at Dexter is thirteen feet, but this varies with the rise and fall of the river, and each change in head works a corresponding change in the quantity defendant is entitled to use. The effect of the prescribed aperture will be to regulate the flow to defendant’s wheels accordingly. Whether the same effect can be secured by means of calibrated wheels, as is contended by defendant’s experts, is not so clear. But however that may be, I am not prepared to say that the referee erred in requiring the use of an aperture as a means of measurement.

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Bluebook (online)
179 A.D. 332, 166 N.Y.S. 311, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-sulphite-pulp-paper-co-v-jefferson-power-co-nyappdiv-1917.