Mason v. Hoyle

14 A. 786, 56 Conn. 255, 1888 Conn. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 26, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 A. 786 (Mason v. Hoyle) 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
Mason v. Hoyle, 14 A. 786, 56 Conn. 255, 1888 Conn. LEXIS 18 (Colo. 1888).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

The rule that now obtains in all jurisdictions, as recognized by all the authorities, is that the use made by [262]*262mill-owners of a stream, must in its relation to other mill-owners on the same stream, be a reasonable use. The rule is obviously one that applies solely to the relation of the several occupants of the stream among themselves. Where one mill-owner is the sole occupant there is in law no limitation upon his use. The rule being that of reasonable use, the application of the rule becomes a matter for each particular case. The question, while in some sense a mixed question of law and fact, is yet essentially a question of fact. Whether the use be reasonable must depend less upon any general rule than upon the particular circumstances. But there are certain conditions essential to a reasonable use, so long recognized by common consent or so obviously just that we may safely generalize with regard to them. Snow v. Parsons, 28 Verm., 459.

In the first place, the use must be as near as possible an equal use, or rather an equal opportunity to use. “ Equity delighteth in equality.” Every owner improving a mill privilege has a right to consider the law as protecting him against any unfair use by any other owner who may establish a mill above him. The term “unfair use,” is the equivalent of “unreasonable use.” When the owner above him has established his mill he is bound not merely by this obvious rule of the stream, but by another more general rule of universal application, that no one may so use his own as to injure the property of another. This golden rule of the law is not of course to be taken literally for, where there is a concurrent use of water and at the same time a deficiency, the use of one will to some extent injure another.

In the next place, a reasonable use is one adapted to the character and capacity of the stream. Indeed there is no other factor of so much importance that comes into the question as that of the capacity of the stream, and in determining this capacity its condition throughout the year is to be considered. If, for instance, there is an ample supply of water for nine months of the year and a scarcity for three, this scarcity, if it occurs so regularly that it can be anticipated, is to be treated as a fixed quantity in the estimate and [263]*263as so far reducing the capacity of the stream. We will discuss this point more fully in another connection.

In the next place, a reasonable use must permit the water to flow in its accustomed way, so far as this can be done and a beneficial use,, though a limited one, be made of the reduced stream, each riparian mill-owner having his fair proportion.

It is the right of every mill-owner, large or small, on the stream, that the water be allowed to run in its usual way except where detained by another to secure his fair proportion of beneficial use. A policy of the state may come in to affect the question.

It is for the public interest that all our streams be improved as far as they can be. This rule has sometimes been applied to favor the larger mill-owner, but it should have regard also to small mill-owners, who are the great majority of those in such business or who incline to go into it. These men of moderate capital investing their means in mills upon our lesser streams, should be protected against such a use of the streams by mills disproportioned to their capacities as would practically deprive them of water and ruin their privileges. And where the water is sufficient only for a few hours use in a day it is a reasonable demand of these lesser mills that they should be allowed water enough to run a part of every day rather than it should be detained by any larger mill in such a way as to compel them to crowd into a single day or night all the work of a week. There would be no way in which the lesser mills could hold their own against the disproportionately large ones, with reservoirs of great capacity, but to enlarge their own reservoirs and ponds to an equal capacity, thus compelling all to enlarge their works in a manner not demanded by the capacity of the stream, and involving an unnecessary and perhaps ruinous expenditure.

If a large mill-owner has made a reservoir which it requires several days to fill in the dry season, he has no more right on that account to detain the water for a week to fill it than he would have to detain it a month. His rights are [264]*264not measured at all by the capacity of his reservoir, for he may be able to double or fourfold its capacity, and the law will not allow him to establish for himself the rule that shall decide his rights between himself and another. The question is, not as to the capacity of the reservoir, but what is a fair use of the water between him and his neighbor below. Where the reservoir, as in the case at bar, is simply to store the water and not to furnish the head and fall, he can as well use the water when it is a half ov a quarter filled as the lower owner can use it when his smaller pond is wholly filled. A reservoir used to store surplus water, when the supply is abundant, for use at a time when it is deficient, is a great benefit to all the lower proprietors, but if used to detain the water in the dry season it may occasion great injury, as in this case.

These principles seem in the highest degree reasonable and just. In their application the particular circumstances of each case must determine the result. What may be a reasonable use in one case may be an unreasonable one in another, even where the general facts are similar. The question is so largely one of fact that, like decisions in the case of wills, one decision can rarely, afford a decisive guide for another; but we believe that most of the principles we have laid down accord well with the best considered cases. A seeming conflict is often occasioned by applying some general principle to the case in hand, without stating the implied qualifications necessary to adapt it to other cases. For instance, in many cases we find the general proposition, upon which the defendant in this case relies, that the upper mill proprietor may detain the water in-times of drouth until he can advantageously and profitably use it to propel his machinery. The leading case in Pennsylvania of Soy v. Sterrett, 2 Watts, 827, adopted in substance this proposition, which was afterwards, in Whaler v. Ahl, 29 Penn. St., 98, applied in a way to indicate that the test as to the extent of the detention of water by the upper proprietor was its usefulness to himself, without regard to his machinery or the size of the stream with reference to the entire use demanded [265]*265by all the other mills on the stream; but this proposition without the suggested qualifications has not been accepted elsewhere. While it is true that a right to use implies a right to detain, yet the word “reasonable” must qualify both the use and the detention. Nothing can be more unjust and unsafe than to limit one man’s rights by the selfish convenience or business of another.

Our criticism, of the Pennsylvania decisions ought in justice to be qualified by the further statement that the courts of that state have adhered more rigidly and consistently than those of most other states to the rule that the question of the reasonableness of the use of water was exclusively for the jury. In Hetrich v. Deachler, 6 Penn.

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

Related

Lake Williams Beach Ass'n v. Gilman Bros.
496 A.2d 182 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1985)
Labbadia v. Bailey
157 A.2d 237 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1959)
Ognio v. Elm Farm Milk Co.
97 A. 308 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1916)
Emerson v. Emerson
3 Balt. C. Rep. 214 (Baltimore City Circuit Court, 1912)
Board of Water Commissioners v. Perry
37 A. 1059 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 A. 786, 56 Conn. 255, 1888 Conn. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-hoyle-conn-1888.