Hickox v. Parmelee

21 Conn. 86
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 Conn. 86 (Hickox v. Parmelee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickox v. Parmelee, 21 Conn. 86 (Colo. 1851).

Opinion

Storrs, J.

The right of controuling the water of the stream in question, for the benefit of the plaintiffs, in derogation of the rights of the defendants, whose works are situated between the mills of the plaintiffs and the outlet of the pond from which the stream issued, which the plaintiffs set up in the second count of the declaration, under which alone the rulings were made of which the defendants complain, and which it was necessary for the plaintiffs to prove, in order to recover under that count, was one of a special, or as it is termed artificial character, and to which, therefore, the plaintiffs would not be entitled ex jure naturœ, as incident to the ownership of their mills.

Both of the parties claim title to their respective mills, although not immediately, under W. & S. Cogswell, who built the mills of the plaintiffs, while they were the owners of all the land at and below the outlet of the pond down to [97]*97the lower boundary of the plaintiffs’ land, and therefore including the land of both the parties on which their mills stand; and in considering the objection of the defendants to the competency of the evidence objected to by them, and received by the court below, the intermediate conveyances, between the Cogswells and the parties in this suit, may be disregarded, and the case viewed as if the parties derived their title immediately from the Cogswells; since nothing has occurred, so far as this point is concerned, to vary the rights of either of the parties from what they would have been, if they had derived their title immediately from the Cogswells, or, in other words, as they existed when the latter parted with the property to those under whom the parties less remotely claim.

While the Cogswells owned all the land between the outlet of the pond and the adjoining land of the mill-owners below, the acts of those mill-owners, in conjunction with the Cogswells, and at their joint expence, in erecting a dam, flume and gate at said outlet, and deepening and widening the channel there and below, for the purpose of controuling the water at said outlet for the first use of their mills, and the continued use of those works for that purpose, by them, for the benefit of their mills, for the period of fifteen years, under a claim of right so to do, unexplained as it is, in the present case, by any circumstances which deprive these acts of an adverse character, constituted a conclusive presumption of a grant from the Cogswells to the mill-owners below of a permanent right, in conjunction with the Cogswells, to construct those works and use them for that purpose; the effect of which was, to abridge the right of the Cogswells to the use of the water of the stream between the outlet of the pond and their mills, in such a manner that they could not interfere with the right so acquired, by such presumed grant, and therefore, to diminish, to that extent, their previous natural rights, as riparian proprietors on the stream. The effect of such grant, however, was merely an abridgment of the rights of the Cogswells to that extent; and, excepting so far as it had that effect, it left their rights in the stream the same as they had previously existed. It did not confer upon them, nor did they acquire thereby, on the ground of contract or [98]*98prescription, any new or additional right to construct or use the works at the outlet or the pond, for the purpose of controuling the water of the stream, for the benefit of their mills, to the exclusion of, or in preference to, those who might subsequently become, under them, intermediate owners on the stream; because the Cogswells being the proprietors, not only of the land on which their mills stood, but also of that between them and the outlet of the pond, their unity of ownership would, on a well established and familiar principle, prevent the acquisition by them of any such new or additional right. Any such acquisition must have been from themselves, which is legally impossible. They could not thus add to the plentitude of their ownership. Therefore, the right claimed by the plaintiffs, under, or by virtue of their conveyance from the Cogswells, to controul the water of the stream between the outlet and their mills, for the benefit of those mills, to the exclusion of the right, claimed by the defendants, to the use of the water, for the benefit of their furnace, which is situated between said outlet and mills,cannot be sustained, upon the ground that the Cogswells, or the plaintiffs claiming under them, have acquired any such right to controul the water, by an agreement between the latter and the mill-owners below, or by an adverse enjoyment thereof, which would amount to, or be evidence of, a grant for that purpose.

But there is another ground, on which, by the conveyance from the Cogswells to the plaintiffs, of the land and mills of the latter, the right of controuling the water above those mills might pass to the plaintiffs and become vested in them, and prevail over any conflicting rights claimed by the defendants to the use of the water for their furnace, which was erected by them subsequent to the erection of the mills of the plaintiffs. If, while the plaintiffs’ mills were owned by the Cogswells, the latter practically attached and appropriated to them the privilege of controuling and regulating the water above, which the plaintiffs now claim a right to exercise, by constructing themselves, or in conjunction with the mill-owners below, the works at the outlet of the pond, and deepening and widening the channel there, for that purpose, and thenceforth continued to exercise that privilege, by means of such works, in connexion with, and for the use and benefit of those mills, down to the time, when they conveyed [99]*99to the plaintiffs, we are of opinion, that such privilege became, and is to be considered, parcel of the estate of which those mills formed a part, and passed as such from the Cogswells to the plaintiffs, by that conveyance; and the effect of the conveyance to the defendants of the other portion of the property, on which their furnace stands, was only to convey to them such property, as it was then modified by the privilege so attached to the mills of the plaintiffs. If, after that privilege was so attached to those mills, it had been withdrawn or severed from them, by the Cogswells, while they owned the property above, as they had a right to do, and their mills had thus been deprived of it, as it would have ceased to be attached to them, or to subsist in connexion with them, it would no longer have been parcel of the estate, and, therefore, would not have passed, by the conveyance of it. These principles are fully established, by the cases of Nicholas v. Chamberlain, Cro. Jac. 121. and Carey v. Daniels, 8 Metc. R. 466. which bear a very close analogy to the present, and are distinctly recognized and approved, in Hazard v. Robinson, 3 Mason's R. 272. and the cases therein referred to.

The testimony of Tomlinson, which was offered by the plaintiffs, tended directly to prove the right set up in the declaration, by shewing the existence of such a privilege connected with their mills, and was therefore properly admitted.

2. The defendants claim, that the conduct of Bennet, (who purchased from the Cogswells, and under whom both parties claim title,) in remaining silent and interposing no objections, while the Waramaug Iron Company, (who purchased of Bennet

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Conn. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickox-v-parmelee-conn-1851.