Union Water Power Co. v. Inhabitants of Lewiston

65 A. 67, 101 Me. 564, 1906 Me. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 65 A. 67 (Union Water Power Co. v. Inhabitants of Lewiston) 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
Union Water Power Co. v. Inhabitants of Lewiston, 65 A. 67, 101 Me. 564, 1906 Me. LEXIS 73 (Me. 1906).

Opinion

Emery, J.

This action is for drawing more water from the plaintiff company’s dam for power purposes than it concedes the defendant city is entitled to draw for those purposes. We have no occasion to enter upon any inquiry as to either party’s legal -rights to the water apart from the terms of a grant by written indenture made to the city by the plaintiff’s predecessor in title, since for reasons hereinafter stated the amount of water the city is entitled to draw for power is fixed and limited by the terms of that indenture. The problem, therefore, is to ascertain what amount of water is named or specified in that indenture for the city to draw for power purposes.

It is sometimes said that the problem in such cases is to ascertain the intention of the parties, or what the parties meant by the language named. This is hardly accurate, for sometimes, ás was not improbable in this case, when the parties have agreed upon the language of [569]*569their contract they may have each a different understanding of the meaning of that language. The real problem is to ascertain what meaning the language itself gives out, what intention or purpose is expressed by the words and phrases used. It is that meaning by which the parties are bound, even though one or the other honestly believed the language to have a different meaning.

Words and phrases, spoken or written, usually have a common, uniform meaning understood by speaker and hearer, or writer and reader, alike. It is this consensus of understanding that makes social and business intercourse possible. When, therefore, the words and phrases used by the parties are known, they are usually to have effect according to this common meaning, whatever either party may have supposed they meant. But while this is generally true, it is not universally true. The same word or phrase may have different meanings in different instruments and in different contexts in the same instrument, [t may have different meanings as applied to different subject matters and also in different situations of the same subject matter. So its common meaning may be overborne by other words or phrases in the same instrument. Hence it is not enough to read only the specific words or phrases in which the grant in this case was made. The then situation and prior rights of the parties, the nature and situation of the subject matter, the object or purpose of the parties in making the contract, or in putting its terms in writing, are to be learned, and the whole contract or instrument is to be studied, to ascertain how far the common meaning of the particular words or phrases is modified by surrounding circumstances and by other words and phrases in the same instrument. All these have been done in this case. But, after all, the problem still is to ascertain the real meaning of the words used, the purpose or intention expressed by those words, for they must be presumed to express what the parties had in mind.

In this case the situation and circumstances are as follows: As early as 1875 the Franklin Company (the predecessor in title of the present plaintiff, the Union Water Power Company) owned and lawfully maintained a dam across the Androscoggin River at Lewiston Falls to raise and store a head of water for generating power. While [570]*570the company did not own the water thus stored and even was obliged to submit to its use for some purposes by others and the public and was obliged ultimately to let it flow to riparian owners below, the company did own exclusively the use of the water for génerating power at that place except so far as granted to others. No other party could lawfully divert a gallon of that water for that purpose without the consent of the company. The water for such use could be granted.or leased in whole, or in part, or divided and distributed in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as the company saw fit except so far as limited by prior grants. Butman v. Hussey, 12 Maine, 407; Matteson v. Wilbur, 11 R. L. 546; Green Bay Co. v. Kaukauna Co., 112 Wis. 323. (87 N. W. 964.).

In 1875, by chap. 107 of the Special Laws of that year, the City of Lewiston was authorized to establish and operate a system of municipal water works to supply itself and its citizens with water for domestic and other purposes, and to take such water from the Androscoggin River. The difference in level was so great that it was to the evident advantage of the city to take this water from some part of the river above the dam instead of below it. Negotiations were soon afterwiard begun between the company and the city as to the terms and conditions on which the company would consent to the city’s taking water from above the dam for distribution for the purposes named in the statute cited, and also other water for propelling the necessary pumps and other machinery of the water works plant to be established by the city under the statute. The company made certain tentative propositions. Amendments were proposed by the committee on the part of the city which were accepted. Later, in August, 1877, a formal written instrument was executed by the officers of the company and those of the city as expressing the terms agreed upon by the two parties. This instrument covered the quantity of water to be taken from above the dam for distribution under the statute, the quantity of water to be taken for propelling the city’s pumps, and machinery, and the terms and conditions under which each portion of water was 'to be. taken. . It also provided that the company should convey to the city a small lot of land near and just below its dam upon which the city could (and afterwards did) [571]*571locate and construct the necessary canals, structures, water wheels and machinery for pumping purposes. Further provision was also made that the company should take certain measures to secure an increased supply of water at its dam for the use of the city and for the benefit of manufacturing establishments in the city. In the amendments proposed by the city to the company’s proposals, this latter provision was asked “for the promotion of the géneral interests of the city.” The price to be paid by the city for all this was the lump sum of $200,000 for all time.

Subsequently various large manufacturing corporations, which had prior grants of water from the company’s dam and pond, executed to the city a written waiver of all priority of right to use the water over the right to be granted to the city under the above named instrument.

Finally, by deed dated Nov. 5, 1877, the Franklin Company conveyed to the city the lot of land named in the previous contract. It also by indenture of the same date granted to the city in perpetuara the right (as defined in the indenture) to take water from the river above and near its dam and also from Wilson Pond (a tributary above the dam) for distribution as named in the statute; and, as appurtenant to the land conveyed the same day, the right (as defined in the indenture) of drawing other water from above and near the dam for operating its pumping station to be established on that lot. This indenture was signed by the Mayor in behalf of the city, and the indenture and the deed were accepted as those contemplated by the contract of the previous August, and the city paid the $200,000 as stipulated in the contract.

The lot of land conveyed was near but not on the river, the Franklin Company still owning a strip of land between.

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Bluebook (online)
65 A. 67, 101 Me. 564, 1906 Me. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-water-power-co-v-inhabitants-of-lewiston-me-1906.