Dyer v. Cranston Print Works Co.

48 A. 791, 22 R.I. 506, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 A. 791 (Dyer v. Cranston Print Works Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. Cranston Print Works Co., 48 A. 791, 22 R.I. 506, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 43 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

This case is now before the court upon exceptions to the report of the master appointed by decree filed March 31, 1899.

The master found :

First. That the surviving complainants have acquired, since the death of Rodney F. Dyer, all his rights in the premises in controversy.

Secondly. That in 1880 Zachariah Chafee, trustee, erected a new darn, as stated in the bill.

Thirdly. That since June 1, 1872, the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Co. and its successors in title to the Cranston Print Works estate have filled out from the easterly bank of the river below the print-works dam, and have crowded the *508 waters of the river to the westward, upon the lands of the complainants, so as to carry the centre-line of the river below the dam to the westward of the centre-line as it existed in 1872, and have extended the easterly bank of the river for a certain distance below the dam to the westward and beyond the centre-line of the river as it existed in 1872, as stated in the bill.

Fourthly. That the centre-line of the Cranston Print Works pond and of the Pocasset river, below the Cranston Print Works dam, as that line existed June 1, 1872, is as delineated on the plat returned with the report.

Fifthly. That the complainants and the respondent are entitled to use equal proportions of the water flowing from the Pocasset river through the Cranston Print Works pond to the dam.

Sixthly. That while the centre-line of the dam and the pond at the dam a's they are now, is four feet easterly of the centreline of the dam and pond as they existed June 1, 1872, this change does not practically or appreciably affect the quantity of water they are respectively entitled to use.

Seventhly. That while the trench of the respondent at the easterly end of the dam as now constructed is of sufficient capacity to take the entire average flow of the river, nevertheless, the trench and its appurtenances are so constructed that the flow of water through the trench may be limited to the quantity .which the respondent is entitled to draw, and, therefore, that no change in said trench, gates, and appurtenances should be made.

Eighthly. That the relative capacities, levels, apertures, position, methods of construction and of operating the respective trenches, gates, &c., of the complainants and of the respondent should be the same, and that, therefore, the complainants are entitled to construct and maintain a similar trench on their land adjacent to the pond.

The first four exceptions are to the master’s finding on questions of fact, and are not insisted upon. The evidence submitted supports the master’s findings, and they must be confirmed.

*509 The exceptions relied upon are the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth, and these raise, in substance, two questions:

1st. Has the master rightly found that the complainants and the respondent are entitled to use equally the waterpower’and rights of the Pocasset river at the dam which retains the print-works pond ?

2nd. If so, are the complainants entitled to restrain the defendant from using more than one-half of the average flow of the water in the river at the present time ?

The defendant’s argument in support of his objections to the finding of the master upon the first question is that the master should have found that in April and June, 1872, the dam belonged to the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Go., and that it was then entitled to maintain it, and hence had a right to all the water-power created by the dam except what bad been reserved by the agreement of 1736 between Samuel Dyer and Rowland Sprague; that this right was not lost by the conveyances of 1872 and the foreclosure of the mortgage in 1883, nor by the alteration of the dam by Ohafee.

Secondly. That the master should have found the defendant entitled, in addition to its right to use the natural flow of the stream, to the exclusive right to use the increased flow of water at certain seasons caused by the maintenance of certain reservoirs.

There can be no question that the deed of Dyer to Gallup, of Gallup'to the A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Go., and the mortgage from Gallup to Dyer, all made in 1872, conveyed the land wyesterly of the centre-line of the Pocasset river below, at,- and above the dam ; and in neither of these conveyances is there any exception of that part of the dam itself which was west of the centre-line, and which was as much a part of the realty as the houses and fences and other “improvements ” mentioned in the deeds. The parties to these conveyances have left no room for construction in defining the exact boundaries of the land they were dealing with. If there had been contentions theretofore as to the ownership of the dam, as the evidence shows, these conveyances settled *510 them, as between the parties and their successors in title, forever.

But this question was not before the master, as it had already been repeatedly decided by the court. In the opinion on the defendant’s demurrer, 17 R. I. 777, the court say: “The complainants’ title i’ests upon deeds bounding upon the centre-line of the river and pond. By that line he sold, including the water-rights; and from that line including the same water-rights, he received back the deed of mortgage subject to which the deeds in the respondent’s chain of title were given. . . . The mortgage was good for the water-rights therein described, and Chafee took his title subject to said mortgage.”

Again, the respondent argued that he should be admitted to show by evidence to a jury,upon issues framed, what the water-rights wei-e which were passed under these conveyances; but the court, after full argument, held that the expression in the deed as it had been formerly construed was not ambiguous and included the rights to use the power of the water as raised by the dam, as well as the riparian rights appurtenant to the land, and refused to send the issue to a jury. Rescript óf July 7, 1893, 19 R. I. 211.

The respondent then filed a bill to reform the deed and mortgage, and the court again affirmed the rescript of 1893, and decided that the deeds expressed the intention of the parties. 19 R. I. 208. A final decree dismissing the bill was entered January 27, 1896.

The defendant again, February 5, 1896, moved for additional issues, involving claims of right to the water antedating the conveyance of 1872, and these issues were refused. Another motion for additional issues, made February 27, 1896, was disallowed.

The death of the original complainant made an amendment of the bill necessary, stating hów his title had devolved ; and the defendant seized the opportunity to present amendments to the answer, setting up prescriptive rights and claims to the water-power similar t© those he now urges. Excep *511 tions to these amendments were sustained, after exhaustive argument. Opinion, June Í5, 1897, 20 R. I. 143.

A further motion to amend the answer was made March 30, 1897, which was refused November 17, 1898, 21 R. I. 63.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Joerger v. Mt. Shasta Power Corp.
7 P.2d 706 (California Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 791, 22 R.I. 506, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-cranston-print-works-co-ri-1901.