Mowry v. Sheldon

2 R.I. 369
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 2 R.I. 369 (Mowry v. Sheldon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mowry v. Sheldon, 2 R.I. 369 (R.I. 1852).

Opinion

Greene, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The mill law literally construed, is broad enough to authorize the owner of an unoccupied privilege below, to erect a dam and mill thereon, and, thereby, to flow out an occupied privilege above.

This does not comport with the obvious policy and purpose of the law.

The first act upon this subject was passed in 1734. (Dig. p. 1745.) The preamble explains its object. It is in these words : “ Whereas it has been found by experience, when some persons in this colony have been at great cost and expense for building of mills, serviceable to the public good and benefit of the town and considerable neighborhood, in and near to where they have been erected, that in raising a suitable head of water for that purpose, it has sometimes so happened, that some small quantity of lands or meadows have been overflowed and damnified, not belonging to the owner of such mill or mills, whereby several controversies and law-suits may arise, for remedy whereof; Be it enacted, &c.” By the present law, express provision is made for the assessment of damages for fall on the land as well as for land. (Dig. 44, page 204, sec. 2.)

The law should receive a reasonable construction in accordance with its spirit and policy.

We think, therefore, that, where a dam above has been erected for mill purposes, the owner below has no right *373 to flow out such dam, even before a mill has been erected or commenced thereon, unless the design of building a mill has been abandoned.

If, however, the dam was erected for other than mill purposes, as for irrigation, or, if the original design of applying it to mill purposes has been abandoned; in either of these events it is subject under the mill law to be flowed by the proprietor below.

It is only the application, actual or intended, of the dam to mill purposes that exempts it from the operation of the mill law.

In the present case, we think the dam was originally built by William Page for mill purposes.

Jenckes Brown says, he levelled the fall at the request of Page, and at this time Page talked of building a mill thereon and proposed to Brown to be concerned with him in it.

William R. Page, (son of William Page,) helped to level the fall and states his father proposed to him, also, to assist in building the mill and to be concerned therein. A grist mill was to be put in the lower story and some card frames in the upper part.

Page had sixteen feet fall on his own land, and the dam was six feet and eleven inches, from the top thereof to the apron.

We think, as a general rule, that the erection of a dam or a mill privilege, available for mill purposes, furnishes prima facie presumption that the dam is intended for such purposes.

Nor will it be safe to say that, because the dam is weak or slightly built, the owner did not intend to put a mill on it. The dams erected on small streams in this State, particularly for grist mills and-saw mills, are fre* *374 quently built in a very slight and unsubstantial manner. These mills do not, like cotton mills, require a steady power. When the pond is drawn, the miller can wait until it fills again.

Without pretending to be very exact in our knowledge of this dam, we think we may safely say it is entitled to the ordinary presumption in its favor, especially when we consider its height and the amount of fall which the owner had on his own land. It is true a breách was made in it a few months after it was built, in the spring of 1842, but William R. Page says this was done by a freshet ; and we all know, 'strong dams are sometimes carried away by freshets. The answer says it was carried away because it was not strong enough to hold the ordinary flow of the river.

The level of Mr. Cushing shows the height of the dam was six feet and eleven inches.

Jenckes Brown thinks, there might have been five or six feet fall there. He says it was not the intention to flow out the fall by this dam ; by which we understand he means all the fall on Page’s land, which was sixteen feet. It certainly must have been the intention to flow out six feet and eleven inches, that being the height of the dam.

Some manufacturers prefer to build a weak dam with a small outlay, and take the chances of repairing, to a heavy outlay and a strong dam, especially on small streams.

This may be bad economy, but the owner has a right to judge for himself, and an error in judgment ought not to subject him to the loss of his privilege.

Again, he may not have the means to make a heavier outlay and build a weak dam at first, hoping to make it *375 stronger afterwards. The evidence shows that Page was • embarrassed and of small means.

We do not find there is any evidence in the case to show that the dam was not intended for mill purposes, except the answer of the defendant and the testimony of James Bates.

The testimony of this witness is too indefinite to be relied upon. All it amounts to is, that Page said he did not know that he should build anything, he thought the dam would improve the condition of his meadow, And in reply to a remark of the same witness that it would make a good cranberry bog, he said, yes.

The answer is more definite. It alleges that the design of Page in building the dam, was nothing more or less than to kill the brush and that he so declared at the time. .The Bill states that Page’s design in building the dam was to erect a mill thereon, and the answer, so far as it negatives this allegation, is evidence. The answer does riot state to whom Page declared his intention, and the defendant offers no proof on the subject, except the testimony of James Bates, to which I have already adverted.

Giving to the answer all the effect to which by the rules of law it is entitled, we, nevertheless, feel bound to say we think it insufficient evidence on which to decree that the intention of William Page was not to occupy the dgm for mill purposes, against his unequivocal acts and declarations, as proved by” Jenckes Brown and William R. Page, and against the strong prima Jade presumption, derived from the fact that the dam was available for mill purposes, and that the owner had sixteen feet fall on his own land.

This fall he might, when of more ability, occupy at the same dam.

*376 It should be recollected, too, in considering this subject, that the right of the owner of the darn to occupy it, is an incident of his title to the land and he ought not to be deprived of it, even upon payment of damages, except on clear and satisfactory evidence, that he never intended it for mill purposes or that such intent had been abandoned.

The next question is, has the original design of the dam been abandoned by the original owner or any of his successors.

William Page died in January, 1842, and the break in the dam, above adverted to, was probably made in January, 1841.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 R.I. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mowry-v-sheldon-ri-1852.