Percival v. Williams

74 A. 321, 82 Vt. 531, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 6, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 74 A. 321 (Percival v. Williams) 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
Percival v. Williams, 74 A. 321, 82 Vt. 531, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 324 (Vt. 1909).

Opinion

Watson, J.

Before and on the 16th day of December, 1872, B. C. Buxton was the common owner of the two properties in Jericho: the land and mill privilege and water rights connected therewith on the south side of Brown’s River and east of the highway, now owned by the orator, and the land, mill privilege and water rights connected therewith on the north side of the river and west of the highway, now owned by the defendant. During said Buxton’s ownership of both properties the present dam was in existence as a part of the property on the south side of the river, and the sawmill and gristmill on that side were operated by water therefrom. There were also mills on the .piece of land on the north side, which were being operated by water taken from the dam near the north end by a wooden tube leading from the dam, under the bridge, to the mills. The mills on both sides of the stream were in active operation when the properties were separately sold and conveyed by him as hereinafter stated. On December 16, 1872, he conveyed the “land, [538]*538mills and privilege” on the north side to Thomas IT. Buxton and Charles IT. Williamson, and as part of the description the deed contained the following: "and the right to take and use water from the dam above the road for running wheel and machinery on said premises at all times except when there shall not be water for running the mills on both sides of the stream and in such case, the right to take water one-third of the time, and the grantees of this deed to be at one-third of the expense of keeping up the dam except twelve feet of it on the south end of the same. ’ ’ The right to take and use water as there granted is an easement in the dam, created for the benefit of the mill property on the north side of the river, then conveyed. Trudeau v. Field, 69 Vt. 446, 38 Atl. 162. The same property and water rights, through sundry mesne conveyances, came to the defendant by deed dated January 17, 1906. In August, 1892, the mill or shop buildings, and the machinery and water wheel connected therewith, on the dominant tenement, together with the tube that took the water from the dam to those shops were all swept away and destroyed by a flood. The shops and tube have never been rebuilt, nor the machinery or water wheel replaced. It is contended by the orator that the easement has been abandoned, and consequently that the defendant has no right in the dam, nor to take water therefrom under thé provisions of the deed of December 16, 1872. The easement was created by grant, and whether the right thereto had been abandoned was a question of fact depending on the circumstances of the case. Non-user was a fact to be considered in determining it, but not in itself conclusive of an abandonment. Congregational Society v. Stark, 34 Vt. 243; Mason v. Horton, 67 Vt. 266, 31 Atl. 291, 48 Am. St. Rep. 817; Sowles v. Minot et al., 82 Vt. 344, 73 Atl. 1025. The record shows that the chancellor was unable to find such abandonment, but to the contrary does find that the defendant intends to preserve his rights as to the water privilege.

May 10, 1873, the property on the south side of the river, including the mill privilege, the water rights, and about six acres of land connected therewith, with the appurtenances thereof, was conveyed by B. C. Buxton and wife to John Early and James Gribbin, the deed containing the following: "this conveyance is made with the condition that the owners of. said sawmill are to build and keep in repair twelve feet of the dam adjoining the mill and two-thirds of the remainder of said dam, [539]*539and in ease of insufficiency of water to run the mills or machinery on both sides of the stream, the owners of said sawmill shall have the right to use the water two-thirds of the time.” This property including the mill privilege and water rights as thus conveyed came from the above named grantees, through. several mesne conveyances, to the defendant by deed dated October 22, 1891. On the 10th day of March, 1892, the defendant conveyed the same property and property rights to Frank P. Buxton, in which conveyance the premises are described in part as bounded on the south by land of ITomer Rawson, and the deed contains a reservation as follows: “But I hereby expressly reserve to myself, my heirs and assigns, the right to construct and maintain in the mill buildings on the premises, a wheel and take water from the bottom of the flume through an aperture two inches by three inches in size, to drive said wheel and connect therewith a force pump or other apparatus to pump water therefrom to the dwelling house and premises of said Rawson, and also the right of laying in a suitable way and maintaining thereafter suitable pipe from said mill to and across the lands here conveyed to the premises of said Rawson to supply the same with water.” All subsequent conveyances of this property down to and including the conveyance to the orator, October 3, 1905, were in terms made subject to the above reservation. In August, 1892, all the mill buildings including the gristmill and sawmill, the wheel which operated them, the flume, and power house, together with all the machinery, on the south side of the river were washed away and destroyed by the same flood that washed away and destroyed the mill and shop buildings, machinery, etc. on the north side of the stream, as before stated. Some new buildings — box factory and sawmill — were erected on the south side in the fall and winter following; also a new flume and bulkhead were built and another wheel put in. But neither the new buildings, nor the new bulkhead and flume, were built on exactly the same site of the old. In January, 1900, all the buildings were destroyed by fire, and part of the flume was burned. The bulkhead was not much damaged, and the dam and wheel were practically uninjured. The wheel was afterwards taken out by the orator’s immediate grantor and never replaced. No abandonment of the water privilege on the south side of the river by those owning it previous to the orator is found; but the orator does not intend to erect buildings for mill [540]*540purposes, nor to keep the dam, flume and bulkhead in repair for use; and if the dam were removed there would be about three acres of land now covered by the pond or rendered wet and swampy by it which could be cultivated or used for meadow or hay.

At the time the reservation was made by the defendant in his deed of March 10, 1892, his father-in-law, Homer Rawson, was the owner of the Rawson farm mentioned therein. Rawson died in 1900. The defendant and his wife became the owners of the farm in February, 1906. It is not found that Rawson had any authority from the defendant to act under the provisions of the reservation, nor that he did in fact act, or claim to act, under it, but it is found that in 1893, with the defendant’s knowledge, and without objection by the owners of the mill property he put in a water wheel and pumping apparatus, cut an aperture two by three inches in the new flume, laid pipe across the mill premises and across his own land and thereby commenced taking water for use at his farm buildings and premises; from which time hitherto the water has thus been taken, conveyed, and used by the owners, tenants, and occupants of the farm for domestic purposes and watering stock.

From the' description given, the dam seems to be what is commonly known as a log dam. In the spring of 1906 there was a break in it, causing a hole through which the water was escaping, so that the pump used for forcing water to the Raw-son farm would not run.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 321, 82 Vt. 531, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/percival-v-williams-vt-1909.