International Paper Co. v. Bellows Falls Canal Co.

100 A. 684, 91 Vt. 350, 1917 Vt. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 1, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 A. 684 (International Paper Co. v. Bellows Falls Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Paper Co. v. Bellows Falls Canal Co., 100 A. 684, 91 Vt. 350, 1917 Vt. LEXIS 255 (Vt. 1917).

Opinion

Watson, J.

When this case was here before, the demurrer to the bill was sustained, the bill adjudged insufficient, and the cause remanded with mandate that the bill be dismissed unless [353]*353further proceedings in the court of chancery be petitioned for and permitted conformably to section 1317 of the Public Statutes. 88 Vt. 93, 90 Atl. 943. On motion in the court of chancery, the plaintiffs were granted leave to amend their bill, and on July 19, 1915, the amended bill “in addition to and amendment of the” original bill, was filed. The defendant filed its answer and, as a part thereof, demurred to the amended bill, specifying the same grounds of demurrer as were specified in the demurrer to the original bill, together with three additional grounds. The demurrer was overruled pro forma, the amended bill adjudged sufficient, and decree entered pro forma for the plaintiffs in accordance with the prayer. The case is here on defendant’s appeal.

Respecting the parties, the amended bill shows that the Moore & Thompson Paper Company, the Robertson Paper Company, the Wyman Flint & Sons Company, and the Rockingham Paper Company, are corporations organized and existing under the laws of the State of Vermont; that the International Paper Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of New York;, that all of said corporations have places of business at Rockingham, in the State of Vermont; that J. T. Moore & Son is a partnership consisting of John T. Moore and Carroll A. Moore, both residents of said Rockingham; that Olive Adams, a plaintiff in the original bill, who has deceased, was at the time of her decease and at the time of the bringing of that bill, a resident of said Rockingham; that the plaintiff Frank Adams is the son of Olive Adams, and administrator of her estate, and is a resident of said Rockingham; that said Abbie Howard and Daniel D. Howard are residents of the State of Pennsylvania; that the business of the Olive Adams estate is being carried on at said Rockingham; that the defendant Bellows Falls Canal Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Vermont, and has an office and is doing business at said Rockingham; and that all of said persons and corporations are now and have been ever since the bringing of the original bill, within the jurisdiction of the courts of the State of Vermont.

The amended bill further shows, as is more particularly set forth .in the original bill, and as stated in the former opinion, that the defendant (hereinafter generally designated as the Canal Company) is the owner of a water power consisting of a [354]*354dam across the Connecticut river from the town of Rockingham in the State of Vermont,.to the town of Walpole in the State of New Hampshire, and rights of flowage connected therewith in each state; that defendant also owns in fee, connected with the water power mentioned, a certain canal in said town of Rocking-ham, by means of which canal and certain flumes, and gates, it furnishes water power to each of the plaintiffs, under the contracts specifically set forth in the original bill; that the tax assessed upon said water power, dam, canal, reservoir, and flowage rights by said towns of Rockingham and Walpole, has been and is assessed to and against the defendant; that said assessment to the defendant is rightful, proper, and equitable, as more particularly set forth in the original bill.

It also appears from the bill as amended that on the 28th day of February, 1832, the Canal Company was also the owner'in fee of land situated in said town of Rockingham and adjacent to the canal, separate parcels of which it conveyed, on that day or later, by deed or lease to the plaintiffs respectively, or their assignors, together with the right to draw or take water from the canal to furnish power at their respective mills and plants on the parcels of land so conveyed, copies of which deeds and leases, set out in Kaec verba, are attached to the original bill and made a part thereof, special reference being made to the “proposals” (set out in the same manner) forming a part of certain of the grants and leases, as indicated therein — particularly to paragraph V.

The deeds, leases, and contracts from or with the- Canal Company, under which the plaintiffs hold their respective interests, are severally pointed out in the former opinion, and need rarely to be noticed here with much particularity. In this connection, however, it should be stated, in passing, that Olive Adams having died, all the right, title, and interest under the deed to John Carey hereinafter mentioned, now stand in the estate of Olive Adams, and in her real representatives, now parties to the suit.

By paragraph I of the “Proposals”: “The Bellows Falls Canal Company propose to sell and lease their Mill Powers situated on the Connecticut River, in that part of the town of Rockingham called Bellows Falls, on the following terms and conditions, to be varied as the parties may agree in the deed or lease. For the price that may be agreed upon, they ypill grant [355]*355or lease a parcel of land to be described in tbe deed or lease with one or more Mill Powers, or fractional parts of a Mill Power, of the quantity of water described below, and with the covenants contained in the annexed deed or lease.” By paragraph II: “Each Mill Power is declared to be the right to draw from the nearest canal or water course of the grantors or lessors, and through the land to be granted or leased, so much water' as shall give a power equal to thirty cubic feet of water per second, when the head and fall is twenty-five feet;........” By paragraph III: ‘ ‘ The grantors or lessors are to construct and forever keep in good repair the principal canals,......They are also to forever maintain the dam in the Connecticut river, at the head of said principal canals, of such height as may be necessary and as they may lawfully do in order to turn the water into the canals. ’1 By paragraph IV: “The flumes and raceways of every mill are to be made, maintained, and kept in repair by the respective grantees or lessees,........”' By paragraph V: “......It is therefore declared that each Mill Power shall forever be subject to a perpetual annual rent,......which rent is to be paid in semi-annual payments forever, free from all charges or deduction whatever for taxes or assessments of every description which may be assessed or levied upon any granted or leased premises after the making of the deed or lease, all of which are assumed by the grantees or lessees. ’ ’

When the “proposals” were adopted by the Canal Company does not appear. But by its deed dated February 28, 1832, the company conveyed to John Carey, in fee, a certain piece parcel of land situated in the village of Bellows Falls, in the town of Rockingham, “and whereon the stone grist mill in said village” then stood (describing the land thus conveyed by metes and bounds), “and also a privilege equal in point of time to that of the owners of any water privileges on the Bellows Falls Canal of taking at his or their own expense by means of a trunk at the bottom of said canal as at present fixed and not exceeding in diameter three feet square, sufficient water from the said canal to carry three run of stones, a smut mill and a corn cracker with bolts and all other machinery which are or may be necessary and proper for a grist and flouring mill with such number of stones as aforesaid when applied upon the principles of water saving machinery as at present constructed.”

This deed contains a covenant for quiet enjoyment of “the [356]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 A. 684, 91 Vt. 350, 1917 Vt. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-paper-co-v-bellows-falls-canal-co-vt-1917.