It is unnecessary to express a distinct opinion on all the points propounded, as it clearly appears there is no error in any part of the record but one. Some of the points were even immaterial. The implication of a grant of the water-right from long enjoyment, for instance, or the supposed effect of the recitals in the different conveyances, was strictly so. When the original owner of the whole conveyed the mill tract, he impliedly conveyed a perpetual right to the watercourse in the land retained by him, so far as it was then enjoyed, as an actual appurtenance to the mill. It is clear too, that the right having been acquired by any means, could not be lost by any discontinuance of its enjoyment when the whole estate came to be possessed again by the owner of the Pont Reading farm, in consequence of his having purchased the interest of the tenant in tail of the mill tract. A right by adverse enjoyment, though analagous in some respects to the statute of limitations, is founded, in the presumption of a grant; and the loss of it by discontinuance is founded in the presumption of a release. But if the owner of the Pont Reading farm, standing, as he did, in the place of the tenant in tail of the mill tract, was without legal capacity to release to himself, there is no room for any presumption on the subject; and beside, an actual release or conveyance by him to a third person, would not be suffered to prejudice the issue in tail. The matter, however, in which error was committed, was the reading of so much of the dockét entries as showed the plaintiff in error to be an appellant from an award of arbitrators. This, we are told, was necessary to show that the action was prior in point of time to another between the parties, in which it was alleged the injury complained of had been compensated by a verdict. But that fact, if it were material, might have been shown by other evidence; and it is, beside, impossible not to see, that the drift of the evidence was to give the plaintiff the benefit of whatever impression might be made on the minds of the jurors by the fact that the cause had once been determined in his favour by judges of the parties’ own choosing. This may have been a substantial injury, and the defendant ought not to have been exposed to the danger of it.
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.