Rice v. Ferris

The opinion of the Court was pronounced by

Paddock, J.

It appears from the case presented, and ais o from an examination of the deeds of the defendant and his assigns, under whom the plaintiff holds, that there were three distinct rights or things granted by the deed of Jqna. Ferris to Elijah Ferris and others.

1. A certain piece of land and the buildings thereon.

2. A right of taking water from the grantor’s flume for every purpose save one.

3. The right of procuring marble from the grantor’s land, free and unmolested ; but not to the exclusion of other grantees.

Under this grant, it appears, Julius H. Rice entered upon the defendant’s land, and raised a large quantity of marble from the ledge; in doing which, and in squaring the blocks, many lesser pieces were broken off; which, though not useful for facing, were valuable for building or burning into lime; and were by him reserved and laid aside for that purpose. Jonathan Ferris, considering that he granted nothing beyond the right of taking and carrying away such blocks as were designed for sawing, removed, and converted to his own use, 35 loads of the fragments, so lying at the quarry. And the question is, whether by the grant, those fragments of marble were the property of the plaintiff or defendant.

It may be remarked, that there is no necessary connection between the'grant of the land and water privileges, and the right of procuring marble from the ledge, either expressed or implied. The extent of the right to quarry marble is not controuled by the quantity required in the mill, then in contemplation to be erected ; and the right of improving in the one place seems to be entirely independent of that of improving in the other. And, as it is admit-ed that the quantity of marble in the quarry is inexhaustable, the Court do not readily see why Rice may not raise and transport *64any quantity to other places than that of the mill named, to be used in the rough, or to apply to any other use for which marble will answer.

Mien and Foster, for plaintiff. Brown, for defendant.

The word marble, is a generic term; and whether in the quarry, raised in large or small fragments, or wrought into statues, the material is knowh by that name: And when Bice had once disengaged a portion from: the general mass, whether in large or small pieces, it was reducing it to his possession, as personal property: and although the lesser pieces were not as valuable as the larger were, no man had a right to dispossess him of them against his will. * ■

The defendant is mistaken in thinking his grant limited : there is nothing in the terms of it which can imply a restriction. If “ free and unmolested,” can mean any thing, it is liberty of ingress and egress upon the defendant’s land: but that liberty the law would attach to the grant of the right of procuring marble from the defendant’s land. The clause “ but not to the exclusion .of other grantees” was probably inserted earlessly, to qualify the words “ free and unmolested.” The right of procuring marble &e. was a privilege or thing, not susceptible of a division: therefore, any exceptions which might have been made would have gone to the whole grant, and would have been a void exception. Shep. Touch. 78 : being repugnant to the grant. Co. Lit. 47. a.

Furthermore, the quantity of marble being inexhaustible, the grant, by the terms of it, was not broad enough to give the grantee or his assigns any exclusive right to quarry; but would leave the grantor at liberty to grant a like privilege to others ; so that they should not interfere, in their work, each upon the other’s location. Therefore, the latter clause was unnecessary, if it was intended as a restriction, or exception.

The Court are well agreed in the opinion, that the broken pieces of marble were the property of the plaintiff; therefore, judgment must be entered up, that he recover of the defendant $17,50 damages, and his costs, according to the agreement of the parties.

Judgment for plaintiff.