Carhart v. French

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

None of the cases relied on by the defendant’s counsel support the claim which he has thought proper to interpose under the clauses in question. Jackson v. Vermilyea, 6 Cowen, 677, holds that the exception of a mill site in a conveyance operates as an exception both of the soil for the mill site and of land necessary for the pond and the milling business. Dygert v. Matthews, 11 Wend., 35, admitted an exception of so much land as is necessary for the use of a grist-mill to be good; but denied its operation until the grantor or his assigns should exercise the right. Oakley v. Stanley, 5 Wend., 523, decided merely that the conveyance of land on which a factory dam stood at the time, carried the right to flow back on other land of the grantor and obliged those claiming under him by title subsequent, to allow the same thing. In Provost v. Calder, 2 Wendell, 517, 519, 523, 4, it was held, that excepting the sole and only right of a stream of water, and providing that the grantee shall not erect or build any kind of water works on the stream, but reserving the same to the grantor, operated as a general reservation of a right to use the water power.

In the case at bar, there is no exception, as in those quoted, of mill sites, nor so much land as is necessary for a mill ■, nor the sole right to the stream, followed by an inhibition to erect mills; nor any thing like either. The lease first contains the exception of all mines and minerals. This is immediately followed by an exception of all creeks and streams, and so *21much grounds as the lessors, &c., may think requisite and appropriate for the erection of works and buildings for the convenient working of the mines. Wood and timber are then reserved for the same purpose, and the right to dig, with that of passing and repassing; all, however, limited to the same purpose by express terms. Farther on, there is a condition that the lessee, his heirs or assigns are not to give any let or obstruction to the lessors, their heirs and assigns, to their prejudice, in the enjoyment of all the rights, titles and privileges saved to him or them by the saving and exception before in the lease mentioned. What are those rights, titles and privileges saved and excepted? There is no saving or exception except for mining purposes, if we are to take the words in their fair and obvious import. The intermediate condition that neither the lessee nor his heirs, &c., shall erect mills or dams on the premises, is not a saving or exception of any right in the lessors, but a mere restriction of the lessee’s right. The lessors or their friends might have claimed a monopoly of the milling business for the neighborhood, and the condition might have been inserted to secure that. It would be a most singular construction of a clause forbidding a grantee to build a mill on the granted premises, which would authorize a dam below sufficient to drown him out.

It is said to be the same thing to the plaintiff whether the dam be built for the flouring or the mining business. How do we know that ? No mine has yet been discovered. If such a discovery should ever be made, the profit may be too inconsiderable to warrant the erection of hydraulic machinery. But the argument, if true, proves too much. The rule insisted on would extend to the wood and timber in the same clause. Thus the lessee is not only to be flowed, but his premises, may be wasted for the milling business, under an exception of mines. It supposes that a man, who is ready to yield an exception for a purpose by which he can probably never be affected, intends a purpose by which he certainly would.

But it is said a proportionable deduction of rent is provided for. If this were a correct principle of construction, *22we have no means of ascertaining the adequacy of the proportion ; but it is not. The rule laid.down in Dygert v. Matthews is the true one: “ The reservation of the land is for a specific purpose, and an appropriation to any other object by the grantors or their assigns is without right. They can be in no. better condition than strangers.” It was said in Provost v. Calder, that every doubt upon the words should be turned against the grantor. But I do not believe we are warranted in going to rules of construction. The expression limits the purpose.

So far, I have supposed that the clauses saved the right, whatever it was, to make erections off the premises demised. But clearly they did not. The exceptions are confined in the clearest, terms to the streams, &c., within the boundaries of the lease to Bullock. . "Within that compass Ten Broeck, and those claiming under him, might have used the water for mining purposes; not on other lands to the prejudice of the plaintiff, even for those purposes. The words of restriction on which the defendant’s counsel relies as the main, if not the sole argument for the right of building a mill-dam, admit of no possible application to land without the boundaries of the lease to Bullock.

The criticism which denies a full deduction of title from Bullock to the plaintiff, and insists that the defendant claims under an absolute grant prior in date to that under which the plaintiff claims, was not made at the trial. Nor, if made, is it apparent how it can affect the plaintiff. Abel French is shown by the bill of exceptions to be the source of title common both to the plaintiff and defendant. He conveyed to Van Aukin in 1829, with clauses excepting no more than those in the lease from Ten Broeck and wife. The plaintiff stands in Van Aukin’s place, from whom the title came with the same clauses as often as the transfer may have been repeated. The point stated to have been made for the defendant at the trial, implies that the title passed from Abel French and McKown to the defendant, subsequently to the date of the deed to Van Aukin; and if this was not so, the fact should have been stated in the bill. The inference is against it. If the defendant in fact took *23an absolute title from one of the plaintiff’s predecessors in his line of conveyances, and that too, prior to the deed to Van Aukin, then I admit that the rule in Oakley v. Stanley applies. If the plaintiff claims under a man who might grant the right to flow, and he did so before putting his right out of his hands on the way to the plaintiff, that fact may be shown on the new trial. The contrary must be assumed upon the case as stated by the bill.

I am of opinion that the verdict should be set aside and a new trial granted.

Ruled accordingly.