The parties in this case are the owners, as tenants in common, of a reservoir dam at the outlet of Megunticook lake, built and maintained for the purpose of storing water to be used by the mills on the stream below, when needed. But while they are tenants in common of the dam, they do not use the water in common. The plaintiff owns and operates one mill, while the answering defendants as tenants in common with Joseph Norwood, are the owners and operators of another and a different mill, on a different privilege farther up the stream.
At different times, the plaintiff made repairs and improvements upon and in connection with the dam and seeks in this process to recover of the defendants their contributory share of the expenses. One defense is that the plaintiff’s remedy is at law.
That the plaintiff now lias no remedy at law, is certain. That he might have had one for the repairs, may be equally certain. But he has lost it by the omission of the necessary preliminary proceedings.
If this dam was a part of the several mills on the stream, the plaintiff upon the refusal of the defendants to join in making the necessary repairs, under the provisions of the old common law of England, could have resorted to the writ of de reparatione facienda. 4 Kent Com. 370; 2 Story Eq. Jur., § 1285. This writ, however, has not been received with much favor in this country and very early in Massachusetts it was superseded by the passage of the mill *360act. This act with slight change has remained in force in Massachusetts and this state to the present time. R. S., c. 57. This act affords a remedy in such cases and the only remedy, unless the repairs are made under a special contract, the terms of which, the act, by its provisions, does not interfere with R. S., c. 57, § 3; Carver v. Miller, 4 Mass. 559; Buck v. Spofford, 31 Maine, 34; Converse v. Ferre, 11 Mass. 325.
If there is an existing obligation to mate repairs, then whether the dam comes within the mill act or otherwise, an action will lie-in favor of the repairing owner, but only when a previous request to the co-tenant has been made, to join in the repairs and a refusal by him. Doane v. Badger, 12 Mass. 65; Washburn R. P. 571, (3d ed.) 4 Kent. Com. 371, (12th ed.) The preliminaries required in either case not having been complied with, the plaintiff has no remedy at law unless by virtue of a contract. If there were one it cannot aid in this process, but would destroy it. It is sufficient now that none has been alleged and none proyed.
It is thus evident, that the plaintiff has, so far as now appears, lost his remedy by law through his own negligence in not complying with its provisions. Can he support his bill in equity ?
It may be said, that having thus lost Ms legal remedy, if the plaintiff made the repairs without a contract he did so at Ms peril and is now without any remedy. This is true so far as the legal foundation is concerned. The mere fact that he made the repairs upon the common property is not sufficient foundation for Ms claim in equity; nor can it be sustained by a relation between the parties previously existing, or on any obligation previously resting upon the defendants. It must be sustained, if at all, by something more than these, sometMng done by the defendants subsequent to the repairs.
In Story’s Eq. Jur., § 1236, the author says; “But the doctrine of contribution M equity is larger than it is in law; and in many cases, repairs and improvements will be held to be, not merely a personal charge, but a lien on the estate itself.” But this is not for the purpose of savmg a man from the consequences of Ids own negligence nor of charging the other party in opposition to the law. As Judge Story says in the next section, it is “where the *361party making the repairs and improvements has acted in good faith and innocently, and there has been a substantial benefit conferred upon the owner, so that, ex aequo el bono, he ought to pay for such benefit.” Broom in his Maxims, page 706, states the same principle thus: “He who derives the advantage ought to sustain the burden.” There are various other ways in which the principle has been stated, but all to the effect, that the party to be charged without any previous contract or obligation to pay, has put himself voluntarily in a condition, by adopting or appropriating the repairs, to receive, and has received a substantial benefit from them. In Webb v. Laird, 59 Vt. 108, these principles were fully discussed, and the defendant held, because he had appropriated the repairs and received a benefit from them. The same principles, applied to the facts in this case, load to an opposite conclusion.
It is true, the bill alleges and the fair inference is, that the dam was built for the mills below and that they or some of them received a benefit from it. But there is no allegation, and the proof does not warrant the inference, that the defendants desired the improvements made in 1886, and this must include the repairs of that year, (as both the bill and proof show that they were made necessary by the improvements,) or that their mill needed them, or that they have received any benefit from them. On the other hand the proof shows, that the defendants did not want the improvements, have never adopted them, or voluntarily received any benefit from them, but have used their mill as before, and that previous notice in writing was given the plaintiff warning him against making them. Nor can we deem it, in entire accordance with good faith, to make the repairs in disregard of the preliminary requirements of the statute, as the facts now appear.
Judgment for the defendants, who have answered, with costs.
Peters, C. J., Walton, Virgin, Emery and Haskell, JJ., concurred.