Rackliff v. Rackliff

52 A. 839, 96 Me. 261, 1902 Me. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 7, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 52 A. 839 (Rackliff v. Rackliff) 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
Rackliff v. Rackliff, 52 A. 839, 96 Me. 261, 1902 Me. LEXIS 77 (Me. 1902).

Opinion

Strout, J.

Muddy Brook stream is the outlet of Clearwater Pond in Industry. Prior to I860 there was, and still is, a dam at the outlet of the pond, which controls the supply of water for the mills on Muddy Brook stream. About 450 feet below this dam there was, and now is, a dam across the stream. At that dam, on the west side of the stream, there was then a grist-mill and starch factory, and later a shovel-handle mill on the site of the starch factory. Opposite, on the east side of the stream, there was a tannery. Nearly five hundred feet below these mills there was, and still is, another dam and a saw-mill. Prior to that time Newman T. Allen and Benjamin Alien owned all the dam, and all the water rights and privileges at the outlet of the pond, and all the land on both sides of the stream used as mill privileges or mill yards, from the outlet of the pond to and including the plaintiff’s premises.

October 22, 1860, S. B. Philbriok became the owner of the tannery and tannery lot of about two acres, on the east side of Muddy Brook, by conveyance from the Allen heirs. Tie deed bounded the lot by “the easterly side of the stream,” thus excluding all common law rights in the stream as riparian proprietors, leaving the whole water power of the stream in the grantor. But the deed granted to Philbriok “ the right to draw water from the upper dam (at outlet of pond) when there is more than three and a half feet of water in the flume, for the use of all tanning purposes,” with a limitation as to user when the water in the flume was below three and one-half feet. The grantee in this deed was required to keep in repair one-eighth of the upper dam (at the pond) and that part of the gristmill dam east of the wasteway, a clear indication that the parties [264]*264contemplated a much larger use of the water power by the grantor than by the grantee.

May 18, 1868, Amos S. Hinldey, who then owned all the water rights at the outlet of the pond, and on the stream, together with the land on both sides, except the tannery lot, conveyed to Oliver and Bryce H. Waugh a parcel of land, which included the lower dam and saw-mill and the mill pond to the same. This dam was nearly five hundred feet below the dam of the grist-mill and shovel-handle factory. The northerly line of this lot was about 250 feet south of and below the grist-mill dam. The plaintiff owns the land and privileges conveyed to the Waughs by Hinkley. The deed granted to Waugh “the right and privilege to draw and use water from Clearwater pond sufficient to carry one wheel in said saw-mill for the purpose of manufacturing timber, boards, shingles, clapboards, laths and pickets, meaning one of the wheels now in the said sawmill or any other wheel venting or requiring no more water to carry it. Said water to be taken through the dam, flumes and pond of the other mills on the stream above the saw-mill.” But he was forbidden to draw water below the depth of four feet above the bottom of the flume, or to draw or use any in the night time.

On November 1, 1900, the defendant had become the owner of the tannery lot, the dam at the outlet of the pond, and all the land on both sides of the stream from the pond to the plaintiff’s land, with the mills thereon, and all water rights appertaining thereto, except the right which plaintiff held as derived under the Waugh deed. At the same time the plaintiff owned the land on both sides of the stream south of and below defendant’s land, with the right to water as granted in the Waugh deed.

In place of the tannery which formerly stood on the tannery lot, ■ but which had ceased to exist, defendant has a saw-mill which he has operated by water from the pond and his dam next below.

Plaintiff claims that defendant has “diverted, withdrawn and turned aside large quantities of water from his mill and prevented the same from flowing down said stream as it ought to have done,” to his detriment. The gravamen of his claim is, that the deed to Philbrick of the tannery lot granted the use of water for tanning [265]*265purposes only, and that when the tannery ceased to exist, and the defendant erected a saw-mill in its place, his use of water for that saw-mill was unauthorized.

To arrive at a true construction of the grant of water right in the Philbriek deed, which was “the right to draw water..... for the use of all tanning purposes,” it is necessary to view it from the standpoint of the parties at the time. The land conveyed was carefully bounded by the east side of the stream, thus excluding all common law rights to the water as riparian proprietors. The only right to water which Philbriek acquired, was the specific grant above quoted. At that time the grantor had a grist-mill and starch factory on the vrest side of the stream opposite the tannery lot. While he had no objection to the operation of the tannery, he might well object to a competing mill on that lot, which would quite likely depreciate the value of his mills and lessen their profits. The tannery was then in existence, and of course in the minds of the parties. The grant was “for the use of all tanning purposes,” not of sufficient water for such purposes, but limited to that purpose. The language is clear and the intention umnistakeable. It was not used as a measure of power, but a limitation upon its use. Deshon v. Porter, 38 Maine, 289, is a case very closely analogous. In Covel v. Hart, 56 Maine, 518, the grant was of “a right to draw water from the saw-mill Hume sufficient to carry on the business of tanning in said yard,” and it was held to be a measure of power, and not a limitation to a particular use, and “restricted substantially to the amount of water which was sufficient to carry on the business of tanning in the yard, as it was carried on at the time of the date of the deed.” But in arriving at that conclusion the court laid stress upon various terms in the deed, indicative of intention, which are not found here. Besides, the language in that case was water “sufficient to carry on” a tanning business, which might be regarded as a measure of power, while the term here is water “for the use of all tanning purposes,” which affords a strong indication that the parties had in view the tannery then existing, and not any prospective substituted use. The many cases cited from this and other jurisdictions all turn upon the language of the grant, as water “sufficient for one fulling wheel,” [266]*266“sufficient to cany a turning lathe,” “water sufficient to drive the factory and machinery attached, ” “sufficient to carry a water wheel,” etc., all evidently and plainly indicating a measure of power rather than designation of use.

In this case we can have no doubt that the grant was limited to tanning purposes, to that “use” only, having special reference to the tannery then existing, and cannot be regarded as a measure of power.

But this construction is not decisive of the rights of the parties to this suit. The grant to Philbrick was of an easement ip the land and water rights of the grantor. The latter retained to himself the right to use all the water from his two dams and flowing in the stream, except that specifically granted. The subsequent grant to Waugh of a specific quantity of water, conferred upon him no right as to the prior grant to Philbrick. Waugh could not complain of the use or non use of its easement by the tannery lot.

On November 1, 1900, the defendant was the owner in fee of the dominant and servient estates. He then owned the dams at the pond and at his mills and all the water rights at the pond and on the stream, and the land on.

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 839, 96 Me. 261, 1902 Me. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rackliff-v-rackliff-me-1902.