New England Box Co. v. Wood

123 A. 826, 81 N.H. 124, 33 A.L.R. 803, 1923 N.H. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 123 A. 826 (New England Box Co. v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Box Co. v. Wood, 123 A. 826, 81 N.H. 124, 33 A.L.R. 803, 1923 N.H. LEXIS 32 (N.H. 1923).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

Upon evidence assumed to be competent and sufficient, as no exception is taken because of its insufficiency on either ground, yit is found that the plaintiffs on March 27, 1898, owned the right to maintain their dam to the height of six and a half feet as they now claim, and to flow the land of the defendants by maintaining the dam at that height. On that date the dam was swept away by a freshet. The dam has not been rebuilt to its former height, and the question in controversy is whether the plaintiffs still own the rights of flowage owned and exercised by them in March, 1898.

As to the land of the defendant tannery company, it is found that for more than sixty years prior to the destruction of the dam the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title claimed and exercised the right of flowage to the extent now claimed. As suggested, it is not contended the plaintiffs’ right was not established as existing in March, 1898. The only question is whether it has been lost by non-user for over twenty years. ' During the non-exercise of the flowage right there has been no adverse use of the flowable land by the owners. There has been no abandonment in fact by the plaintiffs of their rights as they existed at the destruction of the dam. There was no evidence of a grant from the owners of the land now held by the Winchester Tannery company, other than the claim and exercise of the right for over sixty years, and these defendants contest the decree upon the ground that abandonment of an ease *126 ment proved.by use is conclusively presumed from twenty years’ non-exercise of the right. ‘CÑo length of time of mere non-user will operate to impair or defeat an easement acquired by deed. Howard v. Britton, 67 N. H. 484. This is conceded, but the defendants contend that there is a distinction between easements acquired by deed and those acquired by prescription. That a distinction is recognized in the books is stated in Howard v. Britton, supra. What it is, is not stated, and as the easement involved in that case was acquired by deed, the question was not presented. There are numerous cases like Howard v. Britton in which the right claimed being proved by deed a similar statement is made. ^

It is not easy to discover any legal difference between the effect of a deed proved by the writing itself and one proved by circumstantial evidence. Arnold v. Stevens, 24 Pick. 106, 118. See Angelí on Watercourses (7th ed.), note pp. 419, 420, s. 252. There is no logical basis for a distinction between a grant proved by documentary evidence and one proved by long enjoyment. Veghte v. Company, 19 N. J. Eq. 142.

The cases are few which go so far as to sustain the defendants’ present contention. The earliest case referred to in the books, Prescott v. Phillips, said to have been decided in 1797, is not found in any volume of reports. It is cited from Evans’ Pothier on Obligations. The translator relates it as a case within his experience in which the defendant had an ancient mill weir (how obtained is not stated) which he allowed to fall into decay, and after a period of twenty years another mill was erected, and it was held the cesser of twenty years was an extinguishment of the right although no act had been done by the owners of the adjacent land adverse to the right. This is precisely the defendants’ case and exactly supports their contention. Evans, however, criticises the conclusion of the court, saying it ought not to have been presumed the right was lost or abandoned, for one reason because no inconsistent or adverse enjoyment had been shown. One English case decided in 1814 at nisi prius, Lawrence v. Obee, 3 Campbell 514, is reported, which directly supports the defendants’ contention. This was an action on the case for erecting a privy in the defendant’s house which was a nuisance to the adjoining house of the plaintiff. It appears that the privy when first erected was no nuisance to the plaintiff, but she afterwards struck out a window in the wall of her house immediately over it; and that then unpleasant smells were introduced into the house through this window. There was the mark of an *127 old window in the place where this window was struck out, but it had been filled up with brick and mortar about twenty years before the privy was erected. Lord Ellenborough held, the report says, that from the window having been shut up twenty years the case stood as if it never existed, and that the plaintiff having brought the nuisance upon herself by opening the window had no right of action. According to this case a right to maintain a nuisance was obtained by less than twenty years’ user, while the plaintiff lost her window right by failure to open it for twenty years.

On the other hand, in Ward v. Ward, 7 Exch. 838, when the defendant claimed an immemorial right of way, it was said by Alderson, B.: “The presumption of abandonment cannot be made from the mere fact of non-user. There must be other circumstances in the case to raise that presumption. The right is acquired by adverse enjoyment. The non-user, therefore, must be the consequence of something which is adverse to the user.” No well considered modern case has been found holding that mere non-use of an easement for the statutory period will destroy the right, however proved.

Rhodes v. Whitehead, 27 Texas 304; s. c., 84 Am. Dec. 631, states that the great weight of authority is opposed to the instruction given the jury that an easement proved by use for the statutory period could be lost only by adverse possession or denial of the right for like period by the owners of the servient tenement. This conclusion is not sustained by the authorities cited or the examination that has been made in this case. No other modern decision has been found sustaining such a rule. The opinion denies the claim that “The servitude or easement upon the property of another is acquired by prescription, because the length of time during which it has been enjoyed becomes presumptio juris et de jure of an original grant. And that the grant thus conclusively established, must be regarded as vesting as complete and perfect a right as if the express grant of which it serves as evidence was itself before the court.” It is too late here to consider the validity of the answer made by the Texas court to this claim. The rule rejected in this Texas case was adopted as the law of this state in 1855 and as a rule of property cannot now be disturbed. In Wallace v. Fletcher, 30 N. H. 434, 448, the language found in 2 Green, Ev. 539, was quoted with approval as follows: “By the weight of authority, as well as the preponderance of opinion, it may be stated as the general rule of American law, that an adverse, exclusive and uninterrupted enjoy *128 ment for twenty years of an incorporeal hereditament affords a conclusive presumption of a grant, or a right, as the case may be, which is to be' applied as a presumptio juris et de jure,

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Bluebook (online)
123 A. 826, 81 N.H. 124, 33 A.L.R. 803, 1923 N.H. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-box-co-v-wood-nh-1923.