Seymour & Sage v. Lewis

13 N.J. Eq. 439
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 N.J. Eq. 439 (Seymour & Sage v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seymour & Sage v. Lewis, 13 N.J. Eq. 439 (N.J. Ct. App. 1861).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

In the year 1857, James Gaunt was seized in fee and possessed of two lots or parcels of land and real estate in the city of Trenton. The first consisted of an extensive and valuable paper mill, with the water privileges and appurtenances, situate on the raceway of the Trenton Water Power Company, and known as the Delaware mill. The second consisted of a lot of land on the south side of Front street, extending in the rear to Washington street, upon which were erected two brick dwellings. Upon the latter lot there was a valuable spring, which furnished a copious supply of water. The water of the spring had been, by a previous owner of the two lots, as early as 1845, (and probably as early as 1841) diverted, by means of pipes or conduits, from its natural and accustomed channel over the land to the Assanpink creek, to the paper mill upon the other lot of Gaunt, and was there used in the manufacture of paper. The water continued to be thus diverted and used by all the successive proprietors of the two lots down to the year 1857. It was so used and enjoyed by James Gaunt during his ownership and occupancy of the two lots. During that year Gaunt became insolvent. By a deed, dated on the 81st of August, 1857, he conveyed the two houses and lot on Front street to his father-in-law, Griffen Green. On the 26th of September, 1857, he leased the paper mill to the complainants, Seymour and Sage, for the term of two years, and on the 28th of the same month he executed to them a mortgage' upon the paper mill to secure the payment of $40,000 with interest.

On the 2d of November, 1857, a writ of attachment issued out of the Supreme Court, at the suit of Hiram A. Briggs and Bussell Briggs, to the sheriff of the county of Mercer, against the real and personal estate of James Gaunt and James T. Derrickson, as nonresident debtors, by virtue of which the sheriff attached, inventoried, and appraised the paper mill alone. The lot on Front street was not included in the inventory.

[441]*441On the 11th of November, 1851, a writ of attachment issued out of the Supreme Court to the sheriff of the county of Mercer, at the suit of Henry M. Lewis, against the real and personal estate of James Gaunt, as. a nonresident debtor, by virtue of which the sheriff attached, inventoried, and appraised both the paper mill and the houses and lot on Front street. This latter attachment is still pending undisposed of.

In the attachment issued at the suit of Briggs against Gaunt and Derrickson judgment was recovered, upon the report of auditors, in favor of divers creditors, to an amount exceeding $85,000, including a claim of the complainants, Seymour and, Sage, against Gaunt alone, to. the amount of $50,965.75, and the auditors were directed to make sale of the property attached. At a sale made by the auditors, on the 29th day of July, 1859, Seymour, one of the complainants, for the benefit of the firm, became the purchaser of the paper mill, with the privilege of diverting the water from the spring to the paper mill, and also of the houses and lot on Front street. The. property was conveyed to him, accordingly, by deed dated on the 9th of September, 1859. The. complainants, by virtue of their lease and of the title thus acquired by them, continued in possession and enjoyment of the paper mill and of the spring of water down to the. time of filing their hill,

Lewis claims title to the lot on Front street, and also to the spring of water, with the right of diverting it from the complainants’ mill lay virtue of a deed from. Griffen. Green, bearing date on the 5th of May, 1859.

The hill prays that the deed from Gaunt to. Griffen Green, and from Green to Lewis, may be declared to be fraudulent and void, or that they shall stand as. securities for the sums actually advanced to Gaunt as a consideration for the conveyance; that Lewis may be enjoined from using the title as a defence to an ejectment brought by Seymour for the recovery of the said lot, and that he. [442]*442may be-also restrained from diverting or obstructing the flow of water from the spring to the complainants’ mill.

Upon the facts disclosed by the pleadings, and established by the evidence in this cause, the complainants have an unquestioned title to the paper mill, with the appurtenances. The defendant has the legal title to the lot in Front street. Assuming the title from Gaunt to Griffeh Green, under which the defendant claims, to be valid and operative, the material question in the cause is, whether the right to water flowing from the spring passed with the title of the lot upon which the spring is situate, or whether it remained in the grantor as an appurtenance of the mill. The water of the spring was diverted from its natural channel, and was conveyed to the mill, to be used iu the manufacture of paper by a former proprietor of both lots, at least as early as the year 1845. The water was carried from the spring to the mill, a distance of eight or nine hundred feet, by means of iron pipes or conduits laid under ground. The diversion of the water was effected by the proprietor, at a great expense, for the exclusive benefit of the mill. It continued to he so used and enjoyed by the successive proprietors of the two lots for several years, and so long as the title of the two lots were united in the same person. It was so used and enjoyed by James Gaunt at the date of the conveyance of the Front street lot to Griffen Green, on the 31st of August, 185T. The deed is in the usual form of a deed of bargain and sale, and contains no express reference to the spring, or the water flowing from it, either by way of grant or reservation. The complainant insists that the grantee took title to the Front street lot, upon which the spring is situate, subject to the easemeot of the flow of water to the mill, as it was used and enjoyed by the owner at the date of the conveyance.

In an elementary treatise of deservedly high reputation, it is said that the implication of the grant of an easement may arise upon a severance of an heritage by its [443]*443owner into two or more parts. Upon the severance of au heritage a grant will be implied — 'first, of all of those continuous and apparent easements which have in fact been used by the owner daring the unity, though they have had no legal existence as easements; and secondly, of all those easements without which the enjoyment of the several portions could not be fully had. Gale and Whatly on Easements 49.

The rule of the French law upon this subject, with the incidents of which the common law is said to agree, is thus laid down in the French civil code. “ If the proprietor of two estates, between which there exists an apparent sign of servitude, disposes of one of these estates without inserting in the contract any stipulation relative to the servitude, it continues to exist actively or passively in favor of the land alienated or over the land alienated. Code Napoleon, book 2, tit. 4, § 694.

Does this principle prevail at common law ?

In the very recent case of Lampman v. Milks, 7 Smith 507, Justice Selden, in delivering the opinion of the Court of Appeals of New York, said, “The rule of the common law on this subject is well settled. The principle is, that where the owner of two tenements sells one of them, or the owner of an entire estate sells a portion, the purchaser takes the tenement or portion sold with all the benefits and burthens which appear at the time of tho sale to belong to it, as between it and the property which the vendor retains.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.J. Eq. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-sage-v-lewis-njch-1861.