Portland Sebago Ice Co. v. Phinney

103 A. 150, 117 Me. 153, 1918 Me. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 11, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 A. 150 (Portland Sebago Ice Co. v. Phinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portland Sebago Ice Co. v. Phinney, 103 A. 150, 117 Me. 153, 1918 Me. LEXIS 38 (Me. 1918).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This is an action on the case for damages for an alleged interference by the defendant with the riparian rights of the plaintiff. The facts may be briefly stated as follows: At the date of the plaintiff's writ it was the owner in the town of South Portland of an ancient mill privilege, dam, and the land upon which it was erected, used for the purpose of creating a pond for cutting ice and operating a mill. This will be hereafter referred to as the lower pond. The plaintiff was also the owner of another piece of land about half a mile from the above named dam, up a small stream which flowed down into the mill pond and tended to supply it with water for ice and mill purposes. Up this stream about 4800 feet as the stream flows, the plaintiff had also erected another dam across the stream, on his own land, for the purpose of storing water for use, when necessary, for supplying water for its ice field and for power. This is called the Pbllywonlcee dam, and will be hereafter referred to as the reservoir dam.

The interference complained of is the erection by the defendant, upon his own land, of a dam about 3000 feet above the lower dam, and some 1200 feet below the reservoir dam, These distances are approximately estimated by measurements made upon a plan of the locus, made upon scale.

[155]*155The plaintiff’s contention is that the erection of the defendant’s dam is a violation of its water rights upon these ponds and stream, first, as specified and defined in the respective deeds from which it derives its title, and, second, if not by the deeds by prescriptive occupation. In 1854, prior to any of the rights acquired by plaintiff, Silas Skillins was the owner of all the land and all the water rights, now in controversy. The rights of each party were carved out of this ownership by the language of their deeds, and a proper construction thereof. Neither party had any rights prior to this date, and now have only what was granted, barring prescription. The plaintiff’s title and privileges are derived from the following deeds: September 7, 1854 Skillins conveyed the town privilege to Joseph R. Mathews, conveying the right of flowage, only, by the use of this language: “and the right of flowage as I have improved the same.” The grantor also reserved the privilege of cutting the ice on the pond jointly with the grantee. But this reservation is of no consequence in the decision of this case.

On June 26, 1863, Mathews conveyed to Dennis W. Clark in the identical language of the above conveyance. These premises have passed by mesne conveyances from Clark to the plaintiff. This conrpkvtes the plaintiff’s rights in the lower dam, by this first deed. At this time it is agreed that Clark owned all rights of flowage and all riparian rights on both sides of the brook up to the point where the defendant's easterly or northeasterly boundary now is, that is, the plaintiff’s lower dam and privileges of flowage and riparian rights run up the brook to the defendant’s land. At this time, however, Skillins owned all the land on both sides of the stream above the lower privilege up to and “a considerable distance” beyond the Pollywonkee dam.

In 1866 Clark raised the lower dam and thereby flowed the land of Skillins up the stream above the lower dam, from which a controversy arose, resulting in an adjustment, which involved the following deed, under which the plaintiff claims to have been granted the right not only to flow but control the water of the streams tributory to the lower pond. Bear in mind, Skillins at this time owned all the land on both sides of the stream, between the land of the lower pond up to and beyond the reservoir dam. -This deed is important and we insert the description entire: “All my right, title and interest in and to the following described premises and rights. The right of flowing [156]*156and covering with water, so much of my land situated along both sides of Long Creek, so called, and all the gullies and streams and water emptying into said creek, and upon both sides of said creek, streams and gullies, as is required to make a pond for the use of said Clark’s mill, and of cleaning and taking out the ice from said pond. Also conveying all my rights and privileges as reserved by me in conveyance to Joseph R. Matthews, September 7th, 1854, by deed recorded in the Cumberland Registry of Deeds, Book 257, Page 263. Together with all claims for damages caused by the overflowing of my land to make said pond of water, and all the riparian rights in law or equity, for the purpose specified, provided said water shall not be raised any higher than it is by said dam as now built.”

The increased height of the dam remains the same. In 1870, Skillins conveyed to Clark the land at and for some 50 rods above the site of the Pollywonkee dam, which, with Skillins’ consent, had been erected some five years before. This deed was a straight conveyance of land by metes and bounds, granting no privileges whatever. It should, therefore, be observed that the plaintiff gained no water or riparian rights by this grant except what went with the land, and these were all above the dam and immaterial to the decision of this case, so far as any grant of the deed is concerned. All these properties have merged, sooner or later, in the title of the plaintiff. The title of the defendant appears from the agreed statement as follows: “The land between the Pollywonkee and lower pond and mill privilege has passed from Silas Skillins by mésne conveyances to the defendant, and on this land so acquired, the defendant, in the fall of 1914, constructed a dam not far from his easterly fine. This dam is constructed across the stream running from the upper to the lower pond, but is above the point affected by flowage caused by the plaintiff’s lower dam.” All the other facts embraced in the agreed statement are immaterial.

From these deeds, title, and privileges as agreed upon, what are the respective rights of these parties? The rights of these parties so far as the deeds are concerned, are located between the lower pond, and the defendant’s dam. The Pollywonkee dam received no privileges whatever on the stream, below the land on which the dam set. Accordingly, in construing the deeds we may eliminate this conveyance from consideration. Nor need we consider the first deed, conveying only the right of flowage, as this original right was fully [157]*157superceded by the adjustment deed of March 17, 1866, which has been fully quoted. This deed contains but two grants pertinent to the decision of this case. (1) The right of flowing and covering with water, (the latter phrase meaning permanently) all the lands of the grantor bordering on any of the water courses which contribute to supply the lower pond with water for producing an ice field. (2) A grant of “all the riparian rights in law or in equity.” If the provisions of this deed stopped here, it would be a grant of very broad rights. But it does not stop there. Grant (2) contains two most important limitations, both upon grants (1) and (2). It grants "all riparian rights” (a) “for the purpose specified;” (b) provided said water ‘ 'shall not be raised any higher than it is by the dam, as now built.”

Upon the construction of this deed depends the rights of the parties. Let us therefore apply its provisions to the face of the earth, representing the stream, and location of these dams, in connection with the circumstances, and agreed facts, and note the deductions that reasonably follow.

It is no longer debatable that the intention of the parties control the construction of a deed, if it can be discovered.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A. 150, 117 Me. 153, 1918 Me. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-sebago-ice-co-v-phinney-me-1918.