Wright & Rice v. Moore

38 Ala. 593
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 38 Ala. 593 (Wright & Rice v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright & Rice v. Moore, 38 Ala. 593 (Ala. 1863).

Opinion

A. J. WALKER, C. J.

The chancellor’s decree, dismissing the complainants’ bill for want of equity, is the [595]*595only matter for examination in this court. No question as to the sufficiency, responsiveness, and effect of the answer, or as to the truth of the bill, is before us. We are simply to inquire, whether the allegations of the bill make a case for equitable jurisdiction. If they do, the decree is erroneous ; if they do not, it is correct. We are, on this appeal, to regard the allegations as truths ; and will, therefore, in this opinion so speak of them.

The complainants have a dam upon a certain stream, directing to their machinery the water which constitutes its propelling power. This dam backs up the water on the land of some of the defendants, but does not cause it to overflow the banks of the stream. A dam, about fifty feet below the present one, was erected by a former proprietor, more than twenty years before the complainants were disturbed in the use of the- water. At a time intermediate between the erection of the latter and the former, another dam was built. The present dam was erected less than ten years before the commencement of this suit; and it is higher by less than six inches than the previous ones. Whether the first two dams, or either of them, backed up the water on the defendants’ land, is not disclosed by the bill. It does not, therefore, affirmatively appear that the natural flow of the stream upon the defendants’ land was interrupted, until the last dam was built. We can not infer, because the last dam extends the influence on the defendants’ land, that therefore the former dams, of less height, and different position, had the same effect. Indeed, we are without the data for an argument upon the subject; for the bill is silent as to the degree of fall in the stream, and as to the extent to which the water is thrown back upon the defendants’ land. We only make out that the present influence reaches the defendants’ premises, from the statement that a ditch upon their land extends into the pond. The disclosure of the bill is, that there has been, by aid of three successive dams, a continuous use of- the stream for propelling machinery; and that this use has, since the erection of the last dam, and for a period less than ten years', [596]*596disturbed the accustomed-flow of the stream upon the defendants’ land.

[1.] Since the 7th February, 1843, ten years has been the period of limitation to actions for the recovery of land. Clay’s Digest, 329, § 92; Code, § 2476. By analogy to this statute, the adverse enjoyment, since its adoption, for the prescribed length of time, of the privilege of throwing the water of the stream back upon the defendants’ land, would create the presumption of a right to such enjoyment, which a court of chancery would protect. — Stein v. Burden, 24 Ala. 130 ; 3 Kent’s Com. 443 ; Wright v. Howard, 1 Sim. & Stu. 190-203. It is sufficient to authorize the presumption, that the complainants, and those through whom their title has come down- to them, have together had the continuous enjoyment for the prescribed period. It is a legal right of every riparian proprietor, to have the stream flow through his land in its natural channel, without obstruction, or interruption, or even an alteration of its level. — AngelL on Water-Courses, §§ 95, 340 ; Wright v. Howard, supra; Stein v. Burden, 29 Ala. 127 ; Hendricks v. Johnson, 6 Porter, 472. The throwing back of the water of a stream upon another’s land, so as to impede-its current and raise its level, would be an actionable infringement of his right, notwithstanding the water might still be confined within the banks. The privilege of so throwing the water back without overflowing the banks, is an easement, — a right which could as well be acquired by ten years’ enjoyment, as a right to inundate the land of a super-riparian proprietor. Therefore, the adverse enjoyment for ten years, of the privilege of extending a refluence, confined within the banks of the stream, on to the defendants’ land, would create the presumption of a right.

It is clear that the complainants do not, by the allegations which we have heretofore noticed, bring themselves within the principle above stated ; for it is not shown that any enjoyment, challenging and adverse to the right of defendants, or those under whom they hold, was exercised until the last dam was erected, within the period often years.

[597]*597[2.] This defect in the allegations is not remedied by any thing found in the bill. It does assert, that the complainants, and those under whom they claim, have had the exclusive adverse enjoyment of the water of the creek, “m the same way,” for more than twenty years. This assertion can be reconciled with the allegation that the present is higher than the former dams, and in a different location, only by understanding it to refer to the uses to which the water is appropriated, and not to the agency by which it is made available. We therefore regard it as a statement that the water had been enjoyed by them and their predecessors for more than twenty years in propelling machinery, and not that during all that time the same elevation had been given to the water, and the same refluence produced.

It seems that the elevation of the water in the canal caused by the present dam, is only three inches greater than that caused by the previous dams ; and it is, perhaps, a reasonable inference, that the increased refluence above the dam can not be much greater. It is argued, that this increase of elevation is so small as to be immaterial, and that the present elevation must be justified by a long continued previous enjoyment of one so slightly smaller. This argument can not be sound. It is not shown that the previous dams caused any refluence upon the defendants’ land. It is impossible that an enjoyment, which did not distui-b any right, could become the predicate of a prescriptive right to throw back the water upon the defendants’ land.

But, even if the bill had shown that the two first dams backed up the stream upon the defendants’ premises, and that the easement had been enjoyed for more than ten years, it would not follow that a right to increase the extent of the refluence, even by so small an additional elevation as three inches, would be acquired. The law does not make it indispensable to the establishment of a prescriptive right, that the mode or manner of using the water should have been precisely the same through the period of prescription. On the contrary, variations in the use, not materially prejudicial to other owners, do not interfere with [598]*598the prescription. — 3 Kent’s Com. 443. But this doctrine has no relation to the question, whether an adverse enjoyment can be increased in its extent, beyond the limits of the use which gives the right by prescription. A right conferred by deed, would be limited by the terms of the grant. — Angell on Waters, 148-149. Certainly, the argument is as strong for a like limitation of the extent of the right acquired by prescription; and we accordingly find that the authorities carefully restrict the easement acquired by prescription to the extent of the user. — Angell on Waters, §§ 224, 225, 226; Style v. Hooker, 7 Cow. 266; Baldwin v. Calkins, 10 Wend. 167 ; Darlington v. Painter, 6 Barr, 473 ; Stein v. Burden, 24 Ala. 130.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Lightwave Technologies
971 So. 2d 712 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2007)
Ex Parte Lightwave Technologies, LLC
971 So. 2d 712 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2007)
Jackson v. City of Auburn
971 So. 2d 696 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2006)
Huff v. Smith
679 So. 2d 259 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1996)
Roberts v. Brewer
276 So. 2d 574 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1973)
Cowin v. City of Waterloo
21 N.W.2d 705 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1946)
Alabama Great Southern R. Co. v. Denton
195 So. 218 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1940)
Smith v. McElderry
124 So. 896 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1929)
McCary v. McLendon
70 So. 715 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1915)
Guynn v. Wabash Water & Light Co.
104 N.E. 849 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1914)
Revard v. Hunt
1911 OK 425 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1911)
McCalla v. Louisville & Nashville R. R.
50 So. 971 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1909)
Tennessee Coal, Iron & Ry. Co. v. Roussell
46 So. 866 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1908)
Cobia v. Ellis
42 So. 751 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1906)
Alabama Consolidated Coal & Iron Co. v. Turner
39 So. 603 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1906)
Weiss v. Taylor
39 So. 519 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1905)
Mayor of Birmingham v. Land
137 Ala. 538 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1902)
Overton v. Moseley
135 Ala. 599 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1902)
Smith v. City of Sedalia
48 L.R.A. 711 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Ala. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-rice-v-moore-ala-1863.