Potomac Dredging Co. v. Smoot

69 A. 507, 108 Md. 54, 1908 Md. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 69 A. 507 (Potomac Dredging Co. v. Smoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potomac Dredging Co. v. Smoot, 69 A. 507, 108 Md. 54, 1908 Md. LEXIS 65 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On November 25th, 1903, Charles B. Boswell granted to Angus Cameron and his assigns the privilege of taking sand and gravel from the shore or water front of a farm called “Moxley’s Delight” on the Piscataway creek at or near its junction with the Potomac river, in Prince George’s County. The privilege was granted for the term of five years at the rent of fifty dollars per year with the right in Cameron to a renewal of the term for another five years. The privilege granted was described in the conveyance as “The exclusive privilege of taking by dredging or otherwise all sand and gravel that he, his personal representatives or assigns may desire to take along the entire shores or water fronts of the farm owned by the party of the first part known as Moxley’s Delight.”

Cameron was at that time the president of the Potomac Dredging Company of Baltimore City and he assigned to the company the privilege of taking sand and gravel which he had procured from Boswell. The company, having made the farm shore more accessible by dredging a channel to it at a cost of about $5,000, proceeded to exercise the privilege óf taking sand and gravel therefrom.

After the company had removed almost all of the sand and gravel from the water front of the farm between high and low water mark, Boswell, jointly, with his wife and children, on June 4th, 1906, conveyed the farm in fee, for a price of $1,000, to A. F. Harlan who subsequently conveyed it to Lewis E *56 Smoot. The deed from the Boswells to Harlan as well as the one from Harlan to Smoot contained a provision stating that the conveyance was made “subject also to the provisions of a lease to Angus Cameron of November 25th, 1903,” and referred for further identification of the lease to the place at which it was recorded on the public records.

Smoot having acquired title to the farm began to take sand ■ and gravel from it approaching it from the water and excavating into the fast land. The Potomac Dredging Company warned Smoot to desist from further dredging operations but he paid no heed'to the warning, whereupon the company on December 4th, 1906, filed a bill against Smoot and his employees on the equity side of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County for an injunction to restrain them from taking sand or gravel from the shore of the farm. The bill alleged the facts which we have mentioned and further that the dredging operations of Smoot greatly interfered with the • exercise by the plaintiff company of the privilege of taking sand a.id gravel from the shore of the farm secured to it by the lease of November 25th, 1903, from Boswell.

The bill then prays for an injunction to restrain Smoot and his employees “from taking by dredging or otherwise any sand or gravel from the said shore of said farm” or from interfering with the plaintiff’s taking it, and for an account of the sand and gravel already taken.

Smoot answered the bill admitting the taking of sand and gravel by him from the farm and claiming the right to do so as owner of the land. He further denied all right and title of the Potomac Dredging Company to take any sand or gravel from the farm alleging in that connection that the farm had been the property of a deceased wife of Charles B. Boswell, the lessor in the lease of November 25th, 1903, under which the plaintiff company claimed, and that at the time of making the lease he was but a tenant by curtesy of the land and was without power, by any form of grant or lease, to authorize the company to commit waste upon the farm by dredging away its soil, The answer further insisted that even if the *57 company had ever validly acquired in any manner the right to take sand and gravel from the shore of the farm it had, under its grant, no right to take such material from the fast land of the farm, and that it had already taken away the entire shore of the farm and was then unlawfully engaged in taking away the fast land to such an extent as to have caused large trees there located to fall down. He declared his inability to give an exact account of the sand and gravel taken from the shore of the farm by him but stated the approximate amount of it.

After much testimony had been taken and the case heard the Court granted an order for an injunction restraining Smoot and his employees from taking sand or gravel by dredge or otherwise from the entire shores of the farm known as Moxley’s .Delight or interfering with the plaintiff company in taking it during the term of its lease. The order provided that “the term shore as used in this order is limited and confined to high water mark as it existed at the date of the deed from Harlan to Smoot’’ and the injunction when issued contained a similar provision. From that order both parties’appealed, the plaintiff appealing from the portion of it limiting the operation of the injunction to the land below the high water mark, and the defendant from the entire order.

Copies of the lease and deeds which we have mentioned were filed as exhibits and appear in the record. The ownership of the farm by Fannie R. Boswell, the former wife of Charles B. Boswell, and her death intestate about eighteen years ago leaving a number of children are proven, so that there is practically no controversy as to the material facts of the case. The fundamental issue presented by the record is that of the nature and extent of the privilege of taking sand and gravel granted to Angus Cameron, under whom the plaintiff company claims, by the lease from Charles B. Boswell of November 30th, 1903, as it is upon the title derived through that conveyance that the company’s application for relief is founded.

The first inquiry which prese.nts itself for solution is from what portion of the farm did the lease, under which the com *58 ,pany claims, intend to grant the privilege of taking sand and gravel? The privileges granted by the lease are therein described as “certain riparian or other rights, towit, the exclusive privilege of taking by dredging or otherwise all sand and gravel that he (the lessee) his personal representatives or assigns may desire to take along the entire shores or water fronts of the farm.” The size and shape of the farm appear from the following diagram:

*59

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Bluebook (online)
69 A. 507, 108 Md. 54, 1908 Md. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potomac-dredging-co-v-smoot-md-1908.