Ware v. Allen

Decision Date09 January 1886
Citation140 Mass. 513,5 N.E. 629
PartiesWARE v. ALLEN.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
COUNSEL

B.F. Brickett and C.H. Poor, for defendant.

H.P Moulton, for plaintiff.

OPINION

GARDNER, J.

The ruling requested by the defendant excluded all reference to the supply of water to the plaintiff's pond being dependent upon the raising of the defendant's draw-gate. It was limited to this: that if, by the defendant's opening up new sources of supply to his pond, the overflow or amount of water that ran down to the plaintiff's pond was equal to or larger than before, the plaintiff could not recover. The judge refused to give the instructions; but ruled that "if the defendant had wrongfully interfered to prevent the flow of a natural water-course to the plaintiff's pond, the jury were not authorized to find that the defendant has furnished, in the manner claimed, an equivalent supply." The manner claimed by the defendant was by "the raising of the defendant's draw-bridge from time to time, the overflow of the pond, and leakage." This was not in compliance with the rules of law governing the use of water by a riparian proprietor upon a natural stream, which is that he should use the water in such a manner that every riparian proprietor further down the stream should have the use and enjoyment of it substantially according to its natural flow, subject to such interruption as is necessary and unavoidable by the reasonable and proper use of the water in the stream above. Chandler v Howland, 7 Gray, 348. The supply must not depend upon the convenience or caprice of the owner up the stream, upon accident, or mere chance. The proprietor below is entitled to have the water flow to him in its accustomed channel, as it had been wont to run through his land. Even if the plaintiff hitherto, and since the acts of the defendant complained of, has received all the water which ran to his pond before the erection of the defendant's pond, the instruction prayed for should not have been given upon the evidence. The law is well settled that where an act is done which violates the rights of another, and which is of such a character "that, if it be continued for a sufficient period of time, the wrong-doer may acquire a right by adverse possession, the person whose rights are violated may maintain an action therefor, without proof of any other actual damage." Lund v. New Bedford, 121 Mass. 286, 290; White v. Chapin, 12 Allen, 516. The invasion of a right, if persisted in for a sufficient length of time, may result in the extinction of such right.

In the case at bar, the water to the plaintiff's pond came, in addition to overflow and leakage, from the raising of the draw-gate at the defendant's pond. If the water overflowed the defendant's pond at all times, so that the plaintiff would always have all the water which he was accustomed to have before the acts of the defendant complained of, the instruction requested by the defendant should have been given. But the evidence shows that the plaintiff obtained his equivalent volume of water, not from the natural, continued, and uninterrupted flow of the water from the defendant's pond, but by the opening of the draw-gate at his pleasure and whenever he thinks proper. In time, by furnishing water to the stream in such manner, the defendant may acquire an absolute right, under which he may refuse to open his draw-gate, and thus supply water to the plaintiff's pond. The instruction given to the jury recognized this principle.

The evidence disclosed the fact that, in excavating for his pond, the defendant tapped a spring in land adjoining his own, and conducted the water flowing therefrom to his pond, and that the water from the spring supplied his pond to a very large extent. If the spring was situated upon the adjoining land, in such way that the owner thereof could divert the water flowing therefrom to the defendant's pond, as he would have the right to do, this is an additional reason why the prayer of the defendant should have been refused, and the instruction objected to given.

The plaintiff relies upon Elliot v. Fitchburg R.R., 10 Cush. 191. In that case the presiding judge instructed the jury that, unless the plaintiff suffered actual, perceptible damage in consequence of the diversion of water by the defendant, he could not recover, and that if the defendant, by excavating a reservoir and spring above its dam, or by digging ditches, had increased the flow of water in the brook equal to the quantity of water it had diverted therefrom, it was not liable. The instructions given were sustained. There was no question raised of any encroachment upon the rights of the plaintiff by which, in time, he might be entirely deprived of them. This marks the distinction between that case and the one at bar.

Exceptions overruled.

NOTE.

Every riparian proprietor has an equal right to the unimpeded flow in its natural...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT