Rollins v. Blackden

92 A. 521, 112 Me. 459, 1914 Me. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 92 A. 521 (Rollins v. Blackden) 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
Rollins v. Blackden, 92 A. 521, 112 Me. 459, 1914 Me. LEXIS 153 (Me. 1914).

Opinion

Savage, C. J.

Trespass quare clausum. The case comes before the Law Court on report.

The most important controversy between the parties relates to the right of the defendant to draw water from a well on the land of the plaintiff. One phase of this controversy was considered by this Court in Rollins v. Blackden, 99 Maine, 21.

We gather from the evidence the following statement of facts. The plaintiff is the owner of two adjoining lots of land lying on the south side of Main Street, in Dexter. Her fee in each lot extends to the center of the street. Both lots formerly belonged to one Bryant. Bryant conveyed the westerly lot, on which plaintiff’s buildings stand, to the plaintiff’s mother, from whom she took title several years prior to 1882. It was said in argument to have been in 1872. The easterly lot was conveyed by Bryant to the plaintiff in 1882. In 1871, one Flynt dug a well twelve feet deep on the front end of the easterly lot, within the limits of the street, and about one rod easterly from the dividing line of the lots. He dug a trench in the street, westerly across the westerly lot and so on to the hotel now owned by the defendant, but which was then owned or leased by one Hayes. He laid a one inch pipe from the well to the hotel, and from that time on until 1897, when he sold his right, such as it was, to the defendant, he continued to draw water from the well and sell it to the owners or occupants of the hotel. It appears that the pipe entered the well about six feet below the surface of the ground and was bent down in the water, which was thus siphoned out. In 1881 Bryant, who then owned the easterly lot, but not the westerly one, conveyed to one L. D. Hayes who then owned or occupied the hotel “the right to draw water by an aqueduct from the well” . . . for the accommodation of the hotel, and for any other purpose, “with the right to convey the same on the southerly side of said road, but within the limits of the road, so far as my land extends westerly,” which was about one rod, “and with the right of ingress and egress for the purpose of repairing said well or aqueduct.” The deed contained [461]*461the following reservation: — “Whenever the lot on which said well is situated shall become the property of any other party than myself, then all rights hereby conveyed shall cease to this extent, viz: whoever may occupy said lot shall have the preference of the water of said well for all purposes whatsoever useful for the accommodation of said lot, or of any buildings that may be placed thereon, and said grantee, his heirs and assigns, shall have only the right to said water so far as not needed for said lot and buildings.” This conveyance created an easement by grant. It does not clearly appear just what exercise Hayes ever made of the privilege granted by this deed. It gave him no right to convey the water across the westerly lot then owned by the plaintiff. The water continued to run as before in the Flynt pipe from the well to the hotel. There is some evidence from which it may be inferred that Flynt and Hayes made some arrangement for the use of the water. Hayes had an easement, exclusive so far as Flynt was concerned, in the right to draw water and convey it by pipe as far as to the plaintiff’s westerly lot, but no farther. Flynt had put in a pipe system across the westerly lot and to Hayes’ hotel. Neither ownership alone was of any value. But it appears that afterwards Hayes paid Flynt $45 annually for the water service.

The deed of Bryant to Hayes of the right to draw water was not recorded until after the 1882 deed of the easterly lot on which the well was situated, by Bryant to the plaintiff. But as was held in the former case, Rollins v. Blackden, 99 Maine, 21, the plaintiff took her title in 1882 with notice of the grant of water rights to Hayes. This appears by the following modified covenant of Bryant in her deed, viz: that the premises “are free from all incumbrances, except surplus water from well beside road conveyed to L. D. Hayes, and the right to maintain his aqueduct.”

The case shows that in 1882, after the plaintiff purchased the lot on which the well is situated, while Flynt was fixing the well, or digging about it, the plaintiff went to the well, told him that it ivas hers, and objected to his meddling with it, or digging around it, or on her terraces. Flynt told her that by authority of the town he had the right to go into the well, and that he owned it and the water pipe. He made no claim of right except that the town had given him authority.

Later, but about the same time, when Flynt was working on her land near the well, trying to find a leak in the pipe, the plaintiff told [462]*462him that he had no right there, and forbade his going on the land or digging any further. She showed him a copy of the deed from Bryant to Hayes, of the water rights. He replied in substance that the well was in the road, that she had no control in the road, and could not help herself, and that the town had given him the right. He kept on working.

Several years later, prior to 1888, Flynt, who owned the land on the northerly side of Main Street, began digging a trench across the street from his lot to the well, for the purpose, as he said, of running across to his own house to get the benefit of it for himself. The plaintiff told him. “You cannot do it. I will not have it.” He replied that he had permission from the selectmen and should do it. She immediately consulted Mr. Crosby, an attorney, who went with her to the premises. He said to Flynt: — “Flynt, you stop. You know you haven’t any right to take the water and if you don’t stop I will take you into Court.” He also gave Flynt written notice that he had no right to dig the trench upon the plaintiff’s land, and draw the water from her well, forbidding him in behalf of the plaintiff from doing so. Flynt then stopped. The ditch itself had not reached the center of the road, which was the plaintiff’s fine, but Flynt had torn up the sidewalk on the plaintiff’s side of the street, and put it over onto the plaintiff’s terrace, and had dug along the edge of the terrace towards the well. Flynt replaced the sidewalk and went away.

In 1897, Mr. Flynt conveyed to the defendant “my well at south side of Main Street, abreast of Miss Sarah Rollins land, also my well situated in my garden in Flynt Place, north of upper Main Street, the right to go to and from for purpose of repairs, and all the pipe running from the above wells to said Blaclcden’s cellar.” On November 5, 1900, the son and sole heir of L. D. Hayes conveyed to the defendant all the water rights that his father had had under the 1881 deed.

Immediately after the defendant purchased the wells of Flynt in 1897, he reconstructed the system. He dug a trench in a practically straight line from the hotel to the well. The trench was all within the road limits, but it crossed the plaintiff’s westerly lot, and extended a rod on the easterly one to the well. At the same time the defendant laid a two inch pipe, which entered the well about one inch from the bottom. The new pipe did not follow the line of the old one, except as in one or two places the new trench crossed the old. The [463]*463trench ivas dug deeper and wider than the old one, and the pipe naturally conveyed more water than the old one.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A. 521, 112 Me. 459, 1914 Me. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-v-blackden-me-1914.