Court Opinion

ID: 3658191
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:10:44.051967+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:27.122606
License: Public Domain

It is unnecessary to set out the lengthy statement of facts agreed contained in the record. It is admitted that the case turns upon the construction of a deed from R. H. Smith to George W. Grafflin and upon the following call in the deed: "and thence down the bottom to the pond and Kehukee Swamp." His Honor was of opinion that this line extended to the run of the swamp and did not stop at the edge of the pond. It is admitted that the pond called for is a well known and long established pond, known as "Smith's Mill Pond." Taking the deed by "its four corners" and reading it in the light of the facts agreed, we find ourselves unable to agree with his Honor. We are of opinion that "the reason of the thing," as well as the authorities, sustain the defendant's contention that the aforesaid line stops at the edge of the pond. (188) It is unnecessary to discuss Wall v. Wall, 142 N.C. 387;  Brooks v. Britt, 15 N.C. 481, and other cases cited in the brief of the learned counsel for plaintiff. They do not militate at all against our conclusion. If the words "down the bottom to the pond" did not occur in this deed, the authorities cited would be in point. The insertion of those words in this deed, under the circumstances under which it was made, denotes the intention of the grantor to stop at the pond, and the use of the words "Kehukee Swamp" serves only to indicate what waters flow into and make up the pond, and thus to locate it. If this were not *Page 137 
so, there would have been no use in calling for the pond. Smith's pond appears to be an old established pond, of large dimensions, which has existed "since the time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary." It appears to us that the circumstances and facts of the case strongly support defendant's contention. Smith owned the land covered by the pond and swamp and the lands adjoining, including the lands described in the deeds to plaintiff and in the deed to Brinkley, through whom defendant claims. He was the owner and operator of the mill, which from time immemorial had been run by the waters of the pond. The pond covered 100 acres or more, and had been maintained through generations. The margin, bank, or edge of said pond is clearly marked by nature and well defined. The channel or run (to which plaintiff claims the call in said deed extends) of said pond and swamp had a well known and specific name, separate and distinct from the pond and swamp, rising miles above the said swamp and pond. This was known as Kehukee Run, while the swamp — the low, boggy land on either side — was known as Kehukee Swamp, and the pond as Smith's Mill Pond.
With these patent facts before the parties when the deed was made, it is evident Smith intended to convey only to the pond and did not intend to convey the pond itself, which he would have done had he extended the call to the run of the swamp from which the pond had been created. It is hardly to be presumed that Smith intended to     (189) destroy the value of his mill by selling its pond, for it appears that immediately after the execution of the Grafflin deed Smith conveyed to Brinkley "the tract of land known as Smith's Mill Pond, including the mill pond, mill," etc. Ever since then Brinkley and those claiming under him have operated the mill by the power furnished by the waters of that pond. Our conclusion is supported by abundant authority. The two encyclopedias sum up the authorities by saying: "It is perhaps the prevailing doctrine, regarded as particularly applicable to the large lakes of this country and qualified in the case of artificial ponds, that while a general grant of land on a river or stream which is nonnavigable extends the line of the grant to the middle or thread of the current, a grant to a natural pond or lake extends only to the water's edge." 12 A.  E Enc. (1 Ed.), 642.
"Land bounded on a pond extends only to the margin, and the margin of the pond as it existed at the time of the conveyance is the limit, whether the pond was then in its natural state or raised above it by a dam." 5 Cyc., 901.
The American and English Encyclopedia (at p. 653) states the true principle of construction which differentiates this case from those cited by plaintiff: "The boundary upon an artificial pond raised by a dam swelling a stream over its banks presumptively extends to the thread of *Page 138 
the stream, unless the pond has been so long kept up as to have becomepermanent and to have acquired another well defined boundary.
To the same effect and in practically the same language the rule is announced in Waterman v. Johnson, 13 Pick. (Mass.), 261, and afterwards approved in Paine v. Woods, 108 Mass. 160. This rule of construction would not hold good in the case of a purely artificial pond temporarily maintained, the margin or banks of which had not been long established and clearly marked. Smith's pond is a permanent body (190) of water, which has existed in its present status for generations past, and its margin must necessarily be a landmark well known in the community. We think the principles herein laid down are fully supported by the following authorities among text-writers: Angell on Watercourses (6 Ed.), sec. 41; 3 Wn. Real Prop. (5 Ed.) p. 443; Gould on Waters, sec. 203; Devlin on Deeds, sec. 1026; and also by many decided cases. West Roxbury v. Stoddard, 7 Allen, 167; Nelson v. Butterfield,21 Me. 238; Hawthorne v. Stinson, 28 Am. Dec., 167; Diedrichv. R. R., 42 Wis. 248. It being admitted that the pond called for is known as Smith's Mill Pond, we have a definite and certain identification of the thing called for, amply sufficient to uphold a conveyance of the land covered by its waters, had the land under the pond been conveyed by that name. My Lord Coke says, in substance, that where a collection of water has by long existence and usage acquired a specific name, the land by which it is covered may be conveyed under that name, and illustrates it thus: "Stagnum or poole doth consist of water and land, and therefore by the name of stagnum or poole the water and land shall pass also." Co. Litt., 5b.
If land may be conveyed by describing it by a well known name given to a collection of water covering it, we think that it is equally proper to hold that a boundary line might be located and terminated by calling for such body of water by name. The most interesting and well considered case on the subject that we have examined is Boardman v. Scott,102 Ga. 404, also reported with copious notes in 51 L.R.A., 178. In this case all the authorities are collected and carefully and elaborately reviewed by Mr. Justice Fish, who, in a headnote by himself, states the great weight of authority to hold: "Under a deed bounding the land therein conveyed by an artificial pond which had been in existence for more than forty years, and which had thus become a permanent (191) body of water and was still being kept up and maintained as such, its waters, however, ebbing and flowing from time to time, so as to leave a margin of land between its high and low water marks, the line of the land so conveyed did not extend to the thread of the stream from whose waters the pond was formed, but only to the low-water mark of the pond at the date of the deed." In that case the collection of water *Page 139 
called for was known as McCall's Mill Pond, and it was formed exactly in the manner as Smith's pond was formed, by constructing a dam across a swamp.
Smith's pond has existed for so long a period that it must have become a well known landmark in the neighborhood, and may justly be considered a permanent body of water and to have acquired in the community as well known and as well defined boundaries as most natural lakes or ponds; and under these circumstances we think the rule is the same as that universally applied to natural lakes and ponds.
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and the action is dismissed.
Reversed.
Cited: Fowler v. Coble, 162 N.C. 502.