Cobb, J.
Upon the building and equipping of a woolen mill begun within sixty days from May 18, 1895, and completed within a reasonable time thereafter, the grantees in the deed from McFarland of that date, and their successors and assigns, were entitled, under the terms of the deed, to conduct, in pipes laid upon the land of McFarland, water from the lake situated on his land, in such quantities as were necessary for the use and operation of the manufacturing plant. Under the very terms of the grant they were to have “ the right to use all the water that may be necessary for ” the operation of the manufacturing plant. The number and sizes of the pipes which were to be used to accomplish this purpose were not specified in the deed. They were entitled to use pipes of such sizes and of such number as were necessary to accomplish the purpose. The right to conduct and use the water was to continue as long as the grantees, or their successors, saw fit to use and operate the plant, and the right to enter upon the land of McFarland and make all necessary repairs upon the pipes laid thereon was distinctly provided for in the grant. In the exercise of the powers thus granted the parties laid a two-inph pipe, through which the water necessary for the use of the mill has been conducted since the mill was built up to a short time before the beginning of the present litigation. The defendant in error, which is the successor of the grantees in the deed from McFarland, has recently laid a *1074four-inch pipe, which is to be used in conducting the water from the lake to its plant, and the present application is brought to enjoin the defendant from connecting this pipe with the lake, and from using the pipe. The judge refused to grant the injunction. Under the grant in the deed the defendant in error has a right to the use of all the water that is necessary for the operation of its plant, including the use of water for protection against fire, in such quantities as are ordinarily and usually required about manufacturing plants of the character of that operated by the defendant in error. It is claimed by the defendant in error that it has used water for all of these purposes in the past; that it is intended in the future to use only such water as is necessary for the same purposes ; that it is not its purpose by laying the larger pipe to increase the quantity of water that is to be used, but simply to provide a less expensive method of procuring the same quantity of water that it has been heretofore able to obtain through a smaller pipe in a more inconvenient and expensive way; that it does not expect to maintain the two lines of pipe; and that the old line of pipe will be necessarily abandoned, because it is worn out and will soon become useless.' All of this is denied by the plaintiff in error, who claims that it is the purpose of the defendant in error to use both lines of pipe, and to use an increased quantity of water and for purposes for which it has not been used in the past. The evidence upon all of these points was directly conflicting. The judge has seen proper to refuse to grant an injunction, but has left the parties to their remedy before a jury upon a final hearing of the case. In the light of the fact that there is no allegation that the defendant is insolvent, and that the allegations do not make a case where the damages would be irreparable but would be capable of almost exact computation, the discretion of the trial judge in refusing to grant the injunction was wisely exercised.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concurring.