Isherwood v. Salene

123 P. 49, 61 Or. 572, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 95
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 123 P. 49 (Isherwood v. Salene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isherwood v. Salene, 123 P. 49, 61 Or. 572, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 95 (Or. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Eakin.

On February 13, 1878, the defendant, Christine Salene, and her husband Charles, now deceased, conveyed to “H. T. and E. W. Bingham, and to their heirs and assigns forever, the sole and exclusive right, privilege and ease[574]*574ment, to shoot, take and kill any and all wild duck and other wild fowl upon and in any and all lakes, sloughs and waters situate, lying or being upon our land,” etc. Plaintiffs are the grantees of the Binghams of such right and privilege, and they bring this suit to enjoin defendant from draining Wapato, Big Slavin, Round, and Knighton Lakes, and certain sloughs, situated on her lands, which she threatens to do, and also from cutting and burning brush and timber which borders the lakes. These lakes cover almost one-sixth of the farm of defendant. The land upon which the lakes are situated is the donation land claim of Charles Salene, and consists of about 480 acres, through which Willamette Slough, a navigable stream, flows. Much of the farm is overflowed during the winter and spring months, especially when the water is high in the Columbia River. When the waters are low, the tide rises about three feet in the river and the slough. At the low stage of the water in the slough, not at low tide, but very near it, the elevation of the surface of the water in the lakes is about three feet higher than the surface of the water in the Willamette Slough. In the dry season the depth of the water in the lakes is from four inches to a foot. The evidence shows that two of the lakes cover about forty acres of ground, while the portion of the other two, situated on defendant’s land, cover nearly as much. Part of the farm is covered with timber and part with brush, while the lakes are bordered with willows. Willamette Slough flows within 200 or 300 feet of two of the lakes. Defendant’s residence is between Wapato Lake and the slough, and she uses the farm as a stock and dairy farm.

From the time of the execution of the deed from defendant to the Binghams, there have been disputes as to the rights of the Binghams and their successors and continual trouble between plaintiffs and defendant. [575]*575Plaintiffs’ grantors treated the grant as a license to use defendant’s place as they pleased, as was found by this court in Bingham v. Salene, 15 Or. 208 (14 Pac. 523: 3 Am. St. Rep. 152), and plaintiffs now contend for rights which can only be sustained upon the theory that they have a freehold interest in the land rather than an incorporeal hereditament. In 1909 the rights of plaintiffs, under defendant’s deed, were again before this court (Salene v. Isherwood, 55 Or. 263: 106 Pac. 18), in which plaintiffs were restrained from certain encroachments beyond the terms of the deed, and by this suit they again ask to have defendant limited in the improvement and use of her farm. In the opinion in the case last referred to defendant’s right to tempt the ducks to the lakes in increased numbers by placing feed for them there under the terms of the deed was held doubtful, but, as the owner had previously recognized the right, defendants were sustained in the exercise of it.

1. Plaintiffs now contend for rights not expressly granted by the deed, but implied therein, which can only be sustained on the theory that plaintiffs’ interest, not only in the lakes, but in the lands bordering thereon, is a freehold interest. The right to hunt under such a grant is limited to the usual and reasonable methods generally used in the vicinity at the time of the execution of the deed. Salene v. Isherwood, 55 Or. 263 (106 Pac. 18) ; Bingham v. Salene, 15 Or. 208 (14 Pac. 523: 3 Am. St. Rep. 152) ; Hilton v. Greene, 2 Fost. & F. 821. Under such a deed, the grantor is under no obligation to maintain a preserve for the pleasure and sport of the grantees, but.they must exercise the right in the condition it may be at the time.

2. We are cited to no cases upon the questions involved here other than the two Oregon cases, Salene v. Isherwood, 55 Or. 263 (106 Pac. 18) ; Bingham v. Salene, 15 Or. 208 [576]*576(14 Pac. 523: 3 Am. St. Rep. 152), and there are but few American cases on the subject and none discuss this question, viz., the extent of the rights of the grantee in a hunting privilege. Bingham v. Salene, 15 Or. 208 (14 Pac. 523: 3 Am. St. Rep. 152) , is one of the principal American cases cited in the text-books and cyclopedias upon the effect of such a grant, but there are several English cases quite in point. Jeffryes v. Evans, 19 C. B. (N. S.) 246 (1865), is a case where the defendant leased the land to Rees, reserving to himself the exclusive right to shoot, fish, and sport thereon, and thereafter he demised to plaintiff the hunting and fishing privilege reserved in the former lease. Rees, the lessee under his lease, cut down certain furze-cover and woods on the land, which constituted shelter for rabbits and other game, of which plaintiff complained. In deciding the case, Chief Justice Earle, says:

“The next question arises upon the second breach, which alleges that Rees, lawfully claiming, and in fact having, through and under the lessors, the right to cut down divers furze-covers, woods, and plantations in and upon the lands over which the plaintiff had under, and by virtue of the said indenture the exclusive right of shooting and sporting. * * It is contended on the part of the plaintiff that the covenant for quiet enjoyment of the premises demised and granted was impliedly a covenant not to grub up or destroy the furze and underwood; and so the breach of it was an eviction of the plaintiff from his right of sporting. To this it seems to me there is a short answer. There has been no eviction. The plaintiff has just as much right to shoot and sport over the 30 or 40 acres of land which has been so treated as he had before; and that is all the plaintiff covenanted that he should have.”

Mr. Justice Wiles, in the same case, says:

“As to the other point, the argument urged on the part of the plaintiff would have been entitled to much weight if the grant had been of the woods and underwoods, [577]*577though, if it had been a grant of the latter, I should have thought that the tenant might lawfully have cue the underwood in the usual and accustomed way. * * The grant is of the exclusive right of fishing and sporting over and taking the game, rabbits, and wild fowl on the land demised, and on that under lease to Rees. I apprehend that such a grant as that does not prevent the landowner or his tenants from using the land in the ordinary and accustomed way, provided they do not resort to any expedients for destroying or driving away the game. Cutting furze and underwood in the ordinary course of the cultivation of the land cannot be said to be a willful destruction of the game.”

Mr. Justice Smith, in the same case, says:

“It appears to me that the cutting of the furze and underwood, which may have been done in the ordinary course of good management of the farm, was not an interruption of the enjoyment of the incorporeal hereditaments granted to the plaintiff. He had the same right to sport over the land as before. If he wished to have the condition of the land as to furze and underwood preserved, he should have expressly stipulated that the present mode of cultivation of the land should not be altered.”

In Boyle

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 P. 49, 61 Or. 572, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isherwood-v-salene-or-1912.