Citation Numbers: 55 A. 361, 72 N.H. 211, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 48
Judges: Bingham, Remick
Filed Date: 6/30/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The deed of November 29, 1854, from the Lake Company to Elisha Goodwin, has been construed by this court. *Page 213
Horne v. Hutchins,
It having been found as a fact that no rights in the reservoir had become attached to privilege C by the conduct of the parties subsequent to the execution of the Goodwin deed, and it having been decided that the rights in the reservoir which passed with the *Page 214 grant of C depended upon the conditions and circumstances surrounding the property at the date of the deed, and that by legal intendment only such rights therein passed as appurtenant to C as were then reasonably necessary to its beneficial enjoyment, subject to the limitation in favor of the lower rivers, the superior court was directed to "grant such further hearings and make such orders and decrees" as should be "necessary to a final determination of the rights of the parties, in conformity with" the construction placed upon the deed. A hearing was had in the superior court, and the presiding justice has reported some of the facts bearing upon the issues submitted. He has also found that "both parties to the conveyance expected that Goodwin would have the full benefit of the proposed reservoir, subject to the limitations in the deed in respect to mills on the lower rivers." This finding was not material to the issues. It would become material upon an application to reform the deed; but its reformation is not sought, and the parties necessary to such proceeding are not before the court. The deed of privilege C does not in express terms convey any rights as appurtenant to C, either in the old reservoir or in the proposed reservoir. At the date of the deed the Lake Company did not own the drainage rights necessary to the maintenance and beneficial enjoyment of the proposed reservoir; and as the deed did not expressly convey rights in such a reservoir, the grant of C will not be extended by implication so as to include them.
The doctrine of estoppel, contended for by the plaintiffs, is not applicable. The Lake Company, in the quitclaim deed to Goodwin, did not affirm a present ownership in the drainage rights which they subsequently acquired, or agree to convey such rights by their deed. Logan v. Eaton,
When the operation of the mills at C reasonably requires the use of the whole of the first four feet of water to run them during the day, and the raising of the gates at A, for the purpose of drawing water to operate the defendants' mill at B at night or on Sundays, would so lower the water and retard the filling of the reservoir as to interfere with the reasonable enjoyment of privilege C as herein defined, such use would be unlawful and should be restrained.
While the owners of C cannot require the owners of A to draw down the water below the first four feet, for use at C, the owners of A cannot make use of the water, either above or below the four-foot point, so as to interfere with the reasonable use of the first four feet of water by C, except for the mills on the lower rivers.
Whether the maintenance or management of the defendants' present dam at B deprives privilege C of its right in the reasonably necessary use of the reservoir, as it existed prior to the reconstruction of dam A, is not found. If upon a further hearing its maintenance or management should be found to have that effect, such further orders should be made as the situation may demand.
In view of the finding, that prior to the improvements at dam A and the execution of the Goodwin deed the parties were accustomed to draw down Smith's and Crooked ponds four feet below the top of the dam, and that the reservoir then stored only enough water to run the machinery at dam C up to about the middle of June, and in view of the construction placed upon the deed, we are unable to see how the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, which was rejected, if material and found to be true, would in any way increase their rights in the reservoir beyond what it is herein held they have the right to. The plaintiffs therefore were not prejudiced by the exclusion of the evidence.
Exceptions to evidence overruled: case discharged.
All concurred. *Page 216
After the filing of the foregoing opinion on April 7, 1903, the plaintiffs moved or a rehearing upon the question of their rights in the reservoir at dam A, by reason of the estoppel of the defendant Hutchins and his predecessors in title by their conduct since 1854.