White & Hammond v. Amsden

67 Vt. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 67 Vt. 1 (White & Hammond v. Amsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White & Hammond v. Amsden, 67 Vt. 1 (Vt. 1893).

Opinion

TAFT, J.

The Ascutney Mill Dam Company was chartered in 1833. After organization it acquired title to certain property, including that in question, which consisted of a large stone dam with three water privileges; one at said dam known as the upper or great dam power, and two below with dams sixteen or seventeen feet high, known as the middle and lower powers. The great dam was forty to lorty-two feet high, and was built and intended for a two[7]*7fold purpose, viz., to create a power to be used in connection with the privileges at said dam, and to store a surplus of water for the use of such privileges below the great dam as might be sold by the corporation.

The Mill Dam Company owned the land covered and flowed by the reservoir created by the great dam, and the land surrounding the reservoir. In December, 1835, company enacted by-laws relative to the sale and future government of the water privileges that belonged to the corporation. Unless there was a surplus of water the opening and closing of the gates in the great, dam for the purpose of furnishing the two lower powers with water was provided for and regulated by article three of the by-laws. On the 30th day of October, 1841, the Mill Dam Company sold and conveyed to Allen Wardner.its lands at the lower power and all the water and other privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging, and to one Hubbard the lands of the company at the middle power, with all the privileges of, and appurtenances to, the same. Both conveyances were made subject to the by-laws of the corporation, but the amount of water which the grantees were entitled to draw in cubic feet per second was not set forth in the deeds of sale. On the same day, October 30, 1841, the Mill Dam Company executed two mortgages upon the remaining property of the corporation, all situate at the great dam, excepting therefrom “the land covered by the great dam and by the water when the pond is full,” and reserving the right to flow contiguous lands by means of flash-boards, and of entering to repair or rebuild the dam. This conveyance covered all the privileges belonging to the corporation at the great dam, and was made subject to the by-laws of the corporation. The legal title to the property covered by said mortgages passed from the corporation by force of decrees of foreclosure, based upon said mortgages, and is now in the defendant. Thus the ownership of all the powers is derived from conveyances [8]*8executed upon the same day, October 30, 1841, and all made subject to the by-laws of the corporation, which regulated the taking of water from the great dam. Under such conveyances and the by-laws the lower powers took the right to draw water from the great dam, and the conveyance of the upper power was, under the by-laws, subject to such rights. These rights appear in the conveyances of the upper power from the fact that they were made subject to the by-laws. A party claiming title through a chain of regularly executed conveyances is bound by all that appears in such conveyances as an incumbrance upon such title. By force of this rule the defendant is bound by the recitals in the former deeds in his chain of title, that the conveyances were made subject to the by-laws of the corporation, unless he is absolved therefrom by reason of subsequently acquired rights.

The legal title to the property covered by the two mortgages executed October 30, 1841, and which is now in the defendant, passed by conveyances tp E. G. Lamson, and in the latter part of the year 1864 he was the owner of the great dam power, the middle power and all of the lower power property except the grist mill. In 1864 he improved the property at the upper power by erecting a new saw mill, a drop shop and a cutlery shop.

These changes were made to utilize the water at that point instead of discharging it into the stream unused. In March, 1865, Mr. Lamson conveyed all the property then owned by him at the three powers to the Windsor Manufacturing Company, and on the 21st day of the following October that company, owning the upper and middle privileges and a portion of the lower privilege, executed to the Windsor Savings Bank two mortgages, one for ten thousand dollars upon the property at the upper dam, the other for twenty thousand dollars covering the property at the middle power.

[9]*9The mortgages were executed, delivered and recorded contemporaneously and decrees of foreclosure were obtained by the bank upon both mortgages ; the properties were not redeemed from either and the decree under the mortgage of the upper power was assigned to the defendant in August, 1884, and expired in December following, and his title is derived thereunder. The decree under the mortgage of the middle power expired and the property was sold to the orators’ testate. The defendant claims an absolute right to all the water in the stream at the upper power; that the bylaws of the corporation have been abandoned, and the rights of the parties to this proceeding are not in any respect governed by them, except he recognizes the right of the grist mill at the lower power, as provided in the conveyance to Allen Wardner.

The title of the Windsor Manufacturing Company was derived under the two mortgages executed as above stated, in October, 1841, and each mortgage was made subject to the by-laws of the corporation, and in all of the deeds of the property that have been given since, the property is described by reference to prior deeds. The main question in controversy between the parties in this cause arises under the mortgage of the great dam power by the Windsor Manufacturing Company to the Windsor Savings Bank.

It is under this mortgage that the defendant claims title. In it the premises are described by reference to the deed to the Manufacturing Company, and there is added to the description the following words:

“ Together with the various shops, mills, dwelling houses or other buildings thereon standing, and the steam engine, boiler, and the appurtenances thereto belonging, and the main shafting in said buildings and all the water power; meaning to convey hereby all of said premises so conveyed ” (with an exception immaterial here).

Under the assignment of the decree under said mortgage

“The defendant claims to be the owner of the great dam [10]*10and pond and all the water power, except the grist mill right, as against any adverse rights thereto or interest therein of the owners or lawful occupants of said middle falls and lower falls property and water privileges thereunto belonging.”

.The defendant claims that under the words “ all the water power,” he has a right to all the water power created by the reservoir.

There is nothing in the description of the premises in the respective conveyances in the defendant’s chain of title that can be construed as covering the land under the great dam or under the water in the pond ; therefore the defendant has no right to the same by virtue of any title derived under the assignment to him of the said decrees. The main question presented is, to what water power is the defendant entitled under the description in the mortgage deed of the upper power to the Windsor Savings Bank.

This is a question of law arising upon a construction of the deed. In construing a contract the object aimed at is to discover and give effect to the intention of the parties.

It is said in Gray v.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Vt. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-hammond-v-amsden-vt-1893.