Woodring v. Hollenbach

51 A. 318, 202 Pa. 65, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1902
DocketAppeal, No. 265
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 51 A. 318 (Woodring v. Hollenbach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodring v. Hollenbach, 51 A. 318, 202 Pa. 65, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 464 (Pa. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

The plaintiff and defendant are the owners of adjoining tracts of land in Whitehall township, Lehigh county. They derived title through a common grantor, Jeremiah Ritter assignee for the benefit of creditors of Thomas Bertsch. In the deed of the defendant is the following grant: “ Together also the sole and exclusive right for the owner or occupier of the said gristmill, their or his heirs and assigns forever, the use of the waters of the spring known as the Sand Spring, and the outflow, without any interruption or molestation whatsoever for the use of said mill; the outlet of said spring to remain in the same place as at present.” The plaintiff’s title contains the following reservation: “ Together also the use and right and liberty and privilege of the owner of the gristmill, known as Woodring’s mill, his heirs and assigns forever, the use of the water of the spring known as the Sand Spring, and the outflow, without any interruption or molestation whatsoever, for the use of said gristmill, and the outflow of said spring to remain in the same place as at present.” Sand spring issues out of the plaintiff’s land and Woodring’s mill is on the defendant’s land. The mill was operated by water power until 1883, when steam was introduced and was thereafter used in operating the mill. The natural flow of the water from the spring is over plaintiff’s land to Coplay creek, entering it about a quarter of a mile below the defendant’s mill. Thomas Bertsch carried the [68]*68water from the spring in an overhead conduit to the mill and used it in running the mill from 1875 for about eight years. This mode of conducting the water to the mill was then abandoned. The defendant became the owner of the mill premises in March, 1886. He did not use the overhead conduit and the water was not again used at the mill until 1898. In that year the defendant laid a four inch iron - pipe from the public road to the head race in the cellar of his mill. The water was brought from Sand spring to the road in an artificial channel and was taken from that point to the mill in the pipe. In the spring of 1898 the defendant tapped- the pipe in the cellar of the mill with a three quarter inch pipe which he laid to his dwelling house, erected on land which was not a part of the mill property at the time it was conveyed to the defendant. Through this pipe the water is carried to the defendant’s residence and is there used for domestic purposes. The part of the water taken to the house in the pipe and not consumed, is returned to the head race and with the water in the race is used in running the mill.

This is an action of trespass brought December 28,1898, to recover damages from the defendant for illegally diverting water from Sand spring and using it for “ culinary, domestic and irrigating purposes.” The plaintiff alleges that under the deed to the defendant, the latter is restricted in the use of the water of the spring to running his gristmill and cannot use it for any other purpose. On the other hand it is contended by the defendant that under his grant of the use of the water, he can use it for any purpose connected with the working of the gristmill, and that that includes the use of it for domestic purposes at the private residence of the miller. It is claimed that such use of the water is consistent with the grant in the defendant’s conveyance and that the diversion of the water for that purpose is not an infringement of the plaintiff’s title to the spring.

The facts of the case are undisputed. The court below sustained the defendant’s contention and directed a nonsuit. In the opinion refusing to take off the judgment of nonsuit the learned trial judge says : “ There is vested in the defendant, by the grant, the exclusive right to the water, that is, all the water of Sand spring. The reservation and grant state that it is for the use of the gristmill, which at the time of the grant was, and still is on the premises now held by the defendant. [69]*69There is no question of the quantity of water granted. . . . Plaintiff can recover only if such reservation and grant are construed to mean that the water shall be used only for the gristmill. . . . The said diverson, on defendant’s land, of a small portion of the water, is no injury to the plaintiff; the latter is in no worse plight than he would be if defendant used the whole for power purposes at the mill.” The reasoning of the learned judge led him to the conclusion that the defendant has the right to use the water for domestic purposes, and that if he did not acquire that right, under his conveyance, the quantity consumed by the defendant for the purpose was so small that it did the plaintiff no actionable injury.

It is conceded that the rights of the parties to the water of Sand spring depend upon the interpretation of the grant to the defendant and the reservation contained in the plaintiff’s deed. No question of riparian rights arises in the case. The language of the grant and reservation is substantially the same, and in our judgment its construction is not attended with any difficulty. It is plain and unambiguous and the intention of the parties to the conveyance is manifest. It is therefore not necessary in aid of the interpretation of the deeds in question, to invoke the rule that the words of a grant are to be construed most strongly against the grantor. And it may be observed, as said by Mr. Justice Tenny in Deshon v. Porter, 38 Me. 294, that general rules of interpretation “ have no influence in a question of the construction of a deed, where the intention of the parties is clearly expressed in the written agreement made by themselves.” The defendant’s deed did not convey the water generally, nor any specific quantity of it, nor “ a sufficient quantity for mill purposes.” The words of the grant cannot be so interpreted. The defendant acquired the sole and exclusive right to use the water of Sand spring for the specific object named in the grant, to wit: “ for the use of said gristmill.” The grantee is therefore limited in his use of the water to the purpose specifically set forth in his deed. Such must be the interpretation of the grant and reservation in the deeds to the plaintiff and defendant, unless we ignore the language as well as the manifest intention of the parties as disclosed by it. The language of Judge Tenny in delivering the opinion in the case above cited is applicable here, using [70]*70the words “the gristmill” for the word “tanning.” He says “ the object of the grant of the water power is as direct and simple as language could make it, without the use of restrictive words. There is nothing tending to show, that any other purpose was then entertained, or would be thought of afterwards. The deed contains no words indicative of an intention to give a general measure of the quantity of water power granted, such as ‘ so much as would be required,’ etc., ‘ the quantity necessary,’ or ‘ sufficient ’ for the purposes of ” the gristmill.

Water “for the use of said gristmill ” clearly and unequivocally means that the water shall be used as the power in operating the mill. Such is the common and well accepted meaning of the language employed in making the grant, and it is therefore our duty to so interpretit: Schuylkill Navigation Co. v. Moore, 2 Wh. 490; Case v. Cushman, 3 W. & S. 546. The intention of the common grantor as well as of the grantees in the deeds was that the water of the spring should be given the owner of the gristmill for the purpose of running or operating the mill. It was not contemplated by either party to the grant that it should be used for domestic or any other purpose by the owner of the mill.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A. 318, 202 Pa. 65, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodring-v-hollenbach-pa-1902.