Ring v. Walker

33 A. 174, 87 Me. 550, 1895 Me. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 10, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 A. 174 (Ring v. Walker) 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
Ring v. Walker, 33 A. 174, 87 Me. 550, 1895 Me. LEXIS 102 (Me. 1895).

Opinion

Foster, J.

This is an action of trespass, brought to determine the legal rights of the parties in relation to a log sluice through what is called the Bennoch dam on the Stillwater river at Orono, and the sluicing of logs through the same.

The plaintiffs are the owners of all the mills and mill privileges on that dam on the west side of the river. The defendants are the owners of Basin Mills, so-called, on the Penobscot river, about a mile below the junction of the Stillwater with the main Penobscot river.

The log sluice is through and over the plaintiffs’ premises, and is maintained and used by the defendants to get their logs, coming down the Stillwater river, through the plaintiffs’ premises, and on toward their own mills below — about one mile from the Bennoch dam.

The plaintiffs deny the right of defendants to encumber their property with this sluice, or to drive logs through their premises.

The defendants claim this right, not by reason of any public right or use of the stream, but by virtue of a right vested in them under certain deeds of conveyance whereby this right has been reserved to them and those under whom they claim.

In order to obtain a proper understanding of the case, and as bearing upon the legal rights of the parties, it becomes necessary to state, somewhat at length, the following facts :

[555]*555In 1829, William Emerson was the owner of two mill sites on the Bennoch dam, and also another mill site or privilege a little lower down the Stillwater river and extending to its junction with the Penobscot river. On October 20, 1829, he conveyed to Nathaniel Treat and others one of these mill sites, and in his deed, after a description of the premises, is the following: "Beserving, however, the right of erecting a log sluice and floom between my mill and the mills of said grantees, and of planking against their said mill to form one side of said log sluice and floom.”

On- November 1, 1830, he conveyed to John Warren and another the other mill site on this dam, and in his deed conveying the same was the following: "Also excepting and reserving the right of running logs through the premises from the river and of erecting and maintaining a log sluice from the mill pond parallel and contiguous to the said granted mill and the said Treat’s mill, about five feet in width on the east side of said granted mill.”

On June 15, 1833, the said Emerson conveyed to B. M. N. Smyth the mill privilege lying lower down the Stillwater, and in his deed conveying this privilege appears the following: "Also hereby quitclaiming all my right of running logs through the premises conveyed to Warren from the river above, and of erecting and maintaining a log sluice from the mill-pond about five feet in width on the east side of said Warren’s mills, said sluice to be parallel with and contiguous to said Warren’s mills and Treat’s mills.”

In the year 1834, said Smyth built a log sluice through the Bennock dam between the Warren and Treat mills according to the grant of the right in Emerson’s deed to him. This sluice was wholly within the bounds of the premises conveyed by Emerson to Warren and another, except that the easterly side of it was formed by planking against the Treat mill. This sluice was used by the defendants and those under whom they claim by putting logs through it and running them to the Basin Mills from 1854 to the present time.

While the two mills stood, the log sluice was between them [556]*556and was planked up against each, the space being about five feet in width. In 1887, after these mills were burned and could no longer support the sluice, the defendants, against the protest of the plaintiffs, put in a log foundation about fifteen feet wide and extending five feet each side beyond the original sluice on to land which had heretofore been covered by the mills, and this structure has been continued by them ever since with the sluice resting upon it. The interior width of the sluice is now about the same as when the mills were standing, or about five feet. The rest of the fifteen feet now occupied by the sluice is necessary for the foundation to support the walls of the sluice since the mills or their foundation were destroyed.

The trespass complained of is in relation to the five feet upon each side of the original sluice, in building and maintaining the foundation which is necessary to support the sluice.

The question involved is whether or not the defendants have the right to use and maintain this sluice.

The plaintiffs have the same comprehensive ownership that Emerson had before he parted with any of his mills or mill privileges, excepting such rights as the defendants may have.

The Basin Mills were never owned by Emerson. They were erected by said Smyth on a lot about a mile below the Bennoch dam. There is nothing in the case to show in what year these mills were erected, although it must have been long after Smyth’s purchase from Emerson of the other privilege, and long after the sluice was built.

In 1845, Courtlandt Palmer of New York, became the owner of the Basin Mills property, and he and his brother after him continued to own the same, with Gideon Mayo of Orono, as resident agent, until sold to Samuel Veazie April 27, 1863.

August 1, 1870, the heirs of Yeazie conveyed the Basin Mills property to James Walker, the defendants’ ancestor under whom they claim.

On January 22, 1852, the title to the Warren mill, subject to the exceptions and reservations in Emerson’s deed of November 1, 1830, came through sundry conveyances to said Gideon Mayo, who was at that time the resident agent of the Basin [557]*557Mills property and of its owners. At about the same time Mayo became the owner of the other mill privilege and water rights lying between Bennoch dam and the Basin Mills, and through which the sluice extended for the purpose of conveying logs through the Bennock dam to Basin Mills.

On May 1, 1860, Mayo conveyed the Warren mill and privilege to one B. B. Farnsworth and another, closing the description as follows : "Being the same premises conveyed by William Emerson to James Huse and Nathaniel and John Warren, November 1, 1880, . . . together with all the other privileges and appurtenances of said mill and water power conveyed by said Emerson’s deed, and subject to all the reservations and conditions thereof,” — but, "Reserving, however, the right as now had and enjoyed of sluicing logs through the pond to the Basin Mills to said Mayo or his assigns.”

On June 9, 1862, Mayo conveyed to Palmer, who then owned the Basin Mills, the following: "Rights of flowage of dam on Ayer’s Falls near the mouth of Stillwater river; also the log sluice and all rights, privileges and appurtenances connected w7ith and belonging to the same, commencing at the Bennoch dam, so-called, and running thence through the Union mills’ pond into the Basin.”

In Palmer’s deed to Yeazie of the Basin Mills property those same rights were transferred to the said Veazie, and by his heirs to Walker, defendants’ ancestor, in which deed appears this clause : "Ninth. Also the log sluice commencing at the Bennoch dam, so-called, and running thence through the Union mills’ pond into the Basin, with all the rights and privileges thereof, and the right to maintain the same.”

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Bluebook (online)
33 A. 174, 87 Me. 550, 1895 Me. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-walker-me-1895.