Gleason v. Tuttle

46 Me. 288
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 Me. 288 (Gleason v. Tuttle) 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
Gleason v. Tuttle, 46 Me. 288 (Me. 1858).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was drawn up by

May, J.

The complainant’s title to the land alleged to be overflowed, as well as the fact that it is overflowed by means of the respondent’s mill-dam, is fully established by the deeds and other evidence in the case ; and it is conceded that the title to the water privilege, including the spot where the mills [289]*289and dam which occasion the flowing are maintained, is shown to be in the respondents. The complainant, therefore, is entitled to prevail upon the merits, under the general issue, unless the special plea in bar is sustained by the evidence relied upon in defence.

The special plea, in substance, alleges that the respondents “ have the right to, and rightfully may and do maintain the mills and dam described in said complaint;” and that they and their grantors, for more than forty years next before the filing of the complaint, “ have had the right to flow the land described in the complaint, to the full extent of any and all flowing of which they have been the cause, and of which said dam and said mills have been the cause, without compensation to be paid therefor.” The replication to this plea tenders an issue to the country upon the facts alleged, which being duly joined, the burden of proof is upon the respondents to establish the facts necessary to sustain it.

The right to flow the complainant’s meadow does not appear to have been conveyed to the respondents, or their grantors, by any of the deeds which have been put into the case. If, then, any such right exist, it must depend upon prescription, or a user showing that the respondents, or their grantors, have been accustomed to flow the premises uninterruptedly for twenty years or more, prior to the date of the complaint, thereby causing damage during that period.

Damages are not to be presumed from the mere act of flowing. Underwood v. The North Wayne Scythe Co., 41 Maine, 291. They must be proved to have been of yearly occurrence, unless a temporary omission to flow may have been occasioned by the leaky condition or prostration of the dam, in which case the time necessarily and reasonably spent in repairing or rebuilding the dam, will not interrupt the running of the twenty years, or prevent the acquisition of the right to flow. Dana v. Valentine, 5 Met. 8; Wood v. Kelley & al., 30 Maine, 47. A voluntary omission to flow in such a manner as to occasion annual damage, when such omission is accompanied by no acts indicative of an intention to resume the [290]*290right, will afford no evidence of a continued adverse claim to exercise such right. Unless the flowing is of such a character as to enable the owner of the land to maintain a process to recover damages, no prescriptive right to flow the land will be acquired. Nelson v. Butterfield & al., 21 Maine, 220.

In view of the preceding principles, does the evidence in this case raise any presumption of a grant to flow, or in ’any manner show the acquisition by the respondents of any such right? We think it does not. The testimony shows that no less than four dams, for the working of mills, have been successively erected and maintained, for longer or shorter times, upon the falls on Fifteen mile stream, at or near the village of Canaan. The first was erected in 1801. It was very high and leaky, and stood about 10 or 80 feet below the village bridge. In 1810 or 1811 a new dam' was built, a few feet below the place of the first. This second dam was tighter, and, perhaps, a little lower than the other. The third dam was built in 1821, some 100 feet or more further down the stream than those which preceded it. By it the. former dams were flowed out and rendered useless, and all the mills which had been worked by them were moved down the stream and placed upon the new dam, where they still remain in successful operation. In 1841, the fourth dam was built, and now remains. It is above the bridge and about 380 feet from the lower dam.

It becomes unnecessary to determine whether all these dams were erected upon the same mill site, so as to bring the case within the principle of Stackpole & al. v. Curtis, 32 Maine, 383, because we are fully satisfied, upon a careful analysis of the whole evidence, that, notwithstanding the meadows may have been sometimes overflowed, still there has been no flowing of the land described in the complaint, except in times of freshets, by which it was damaged in any degree, prior to the erection of the fourth dam; nor, since that, does there seem to have been any flowing, annually, prejudicial to such land, until after 1852, when this dam was rebuilt or repaired. The testimony fails to show that, before this, the trees or grass, [291]*291or soil, upon the complainant’s meadow, have been usually injured by the water thrown upon them by any of the dams. Much less does it show an annual injury. Whether the fact, that no such damage was sustained, is owing to the former dams being somewhat lower and much more leaky than the last, or to some other cause, is not material. This is not a casé of the occasional absence of damage in any one year or years, arising from the state of the dams, but a case in which, if actual damage is shown to have existed in any particular years, its existence is only an exception to the usual condition of the land, after the erection of the dams. It is sufficient for the complainant, that no such continued, annual damage has been shown to exist, prior to the filing of his complaint, as will sustain the prescriptive right to flow without compensation, which is claimed by the respondents in their special plea.

It appears from the testimony of the engineers, Crosby and Wilde, that the fourth dam is at least six feet higher than the one now in use below it. The other testimony shows that it is this fourth, or upper dam, which causes the flowing now complained of. It was first erected by the respondents upon land belonging to their father, but by his consent; and it was repaired, or rebuilt, in 1852, by Frost and Burrill, under a lease of the privilege upon the west side of the stream, from these respondents; since which time it has been occupied by them and their lessees for their several mills; the latter using it for a machine shop, and the respondents for a shingle machine, a planing machine, and a door and blind factory. Whether, during the three years next preceding the filing of the complaint, the complainant’s meadow has been annually overflowed, and, if so, whether it was occasioned by the respondents’ dam, together with the extent of the flowing, and, whether it was prejudicial to the complainant or not, are questions, in the first instance, for the commissioners who are to be appointed in pursuance of the statute, and by whom the yearly damages, if any, are to be assessed. Prescott v. Curtis & als., 42 Maine, 64.

[292]*292It is objected, in defence, that the complaint in this case is insufficient to authorize a judgment upon it against the respondents. If this objection is open to them upon the pleadings, the complaint will be found to contain all which the statute, upon which it is founded, requires. It is true, it does not allege that the water mill and dam of the respondents were erected upon their own land, or on the land of another, with the owner’s consent. Such an allegation was held to be necessary under the statute of 1821, c. 45. But this statute was so modified by the R. S. of 1841, c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Me. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gleason-v-tuttle-me-1858.