Court Opinion

ID: 6576826
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:35:04.456628+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:07.737701
License: Public Domain

Hinman, J.
The superior court, at its October term, 1853, found certain facts, in respect to the admission of evidence before the committee, appointed to find the facts in this case; and that the committee was materially influenced, and controlled, by the same, in considering, deciding and making his report; and thereupon set aside, and rejected, the report: and, at a subsequent day, without taking any measures to find whether the facts stated in the bill were, or were not, true, dismissed the bill, and rendered judgment for costs, in favor of the defendant. The order of the court, dismissing the bill, was irregular, because the statute expressly requires *537that courts of equity shall cause the facts, on which they found their decrees, to appear on record. Stat. Ed., 1854, p. 471, § 7. But this irregularity has now been obviated by the agreement of the parties, sanctioned by the court, which has set aside the order rejecting the report and dismissing the bill. And the case now comes before us, upon the report of the committee appointed to find the facts, the remonstrance of the defendant against the acceptance of it, the finding of the superior court, at its October term, 1853, and the reservation of all questions, arising upon these documents, for the advice of this court, at the request of the parties pursuant to their said agreement. There are also appended to the record, the reasons of the judge of the superior court for dismissing the bill. But this, being no part of the record, must be entirely disregarded, so far as any facts are stated therein, which are at all at variance with the facts, found in the other documents, or are not properly in issue between the parties.
The object of the bill is to reform the plaintiff’s deed to the defendant, so as to except from the operation of the covenant against incumbrances, a grant of a right to dig, and maintain through the premises conveyed, a ditch, for the conveyance of water from a certain grist-mill to the river*, which was made in 1792, by the then owner of the premises, and was to continue for the term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years, the grantee thereof always to keep said ditch covered with stones and earth, and levelled so that grass may grow and form a sod upon it, for the use of the grantor, and the grantee to have the right of access to said land, to make all necessary repairs in the ditch, and the privilege of a free flow of water from the mouth of the ditch, with other provisions contained therein, which it is unnecessary to enumerate.
The report finds the material allegations in the bill, to be proved and true,—particularly that, up to the time of his deed to the defendant, the plaintiff owned the premises; that, ever since 1792, there has always been the raceway, or ditch, *538described in the bill, running through the same, and conveying the water from a mill, situated a little westerly from the land, one-half of the ditch being covered, and the remaining part uncovered and plainly visible; that the grant of the right to maintain the ditch, and its existence, and use, has been a fact of general notoriety for more than sixty years, in Dan-bury, and was well known to the defendant, being indispensable to the operating of the mill, which was also well known to the defendant, and to the plaintiff; that no mention or allusion was made to it in the negotiation for the sale and purchase, but its existence as a permanent structure, its necessity in operating the mill, and the right to keep and maintain it, were treated by the parties as a permanent right of the mill-owners; and it was not the intention of the parties, that the plaintiff should warrant against its existence, or the right of the mill-owners to maintain it, and it was not deemed, or considered, by the defendant as an incumbrance which would subject the plaintiff to liability on any covenants, which might be inserted in the deed. Notwithstanding which, the plaintiff, on the 2d day of October, 1851, did sell to the defendant, and convey to him, said land, by deed of warranty, containing the usual covenants against incumbrances, with no exception of said right of the mill-owners to maintain said ditch for the said term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years, whereas it was the' intention of the defendant to purchase said land, and take said deed, subject to said ditch and the right in the owners of the mill to maintain the same; and further, finding that the right to keep and maintain said diteh, for the term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years from the date of the grant, ought to have been excepted from the covenant against incumbrances, but through haste, and by reason of inadvertence on the part of both parties, the right was not excepted therefrom. And the defendant now threatens the plaintiff to prosecute him for damages, on aceount of the existence of said ditch, and the right in the mill-owners to maintain it.
*539These facts, if properly found by the committee, present a clear case of mutual mistake, which it is always the province of a court of equity to relieve against. 1 Sto. Eq., § 142 and 152 inclusive. The case, then, must depend upon the question, whether the committee proceeded properly in finding them, and acted upon proper evidence; or whether there is anything in the finding of the superior court, which varies the case from that presented in the finding of the committee.
The remonstrance excepts to the finding of the committee, on three grounds.
First. The committee received, in evidence, to prove those facts, certain letters, written by said parties.
Secondly. The facts regarding the existence, character, and necessity of said ditch, and the knowledge thereof by the defendant.
Thirdly. That certain incumbrances on said land were mentioned by the defendant, when said deed was given, and were excepted from said deed. And said remonstrance alleges, and claims that no part of said evidence showed any knowledge in the defendant, of any lease, or the terms thereof.
The finding of the superior court upon this remonstrance is, that the plaintiff, on the trial before the committee, offered to prove, by the evidence and testimony in said remonstrance set forth, the truth of the facts set forth in the bill, and said evidence was admitted, and heard, and considered, by the committee. And among other witnesses, the defendant testified to the notoriety, and condition, and situation of the race-way, or ditch, as claimed by the plaintiff, and that the same was not spoken of by the parties, during the negotiations, but he supposed the owner of the land had control of the ditch, or raceway; and that the committee received said evidence as proper, and was materially influenced and controlled by it in his decision. Whereupon, the court found the facts alleged in the remonstrance, proved, and thereupon disapproved and set aside the report.
*540In regard to the letters between the parties, the remonstrance does not state their contents, though it alludes to them, as annexed to it. They however have not been annexed, and the court, in its finding, makes no special allusion to them, and as we have only seen one or two of them, it is impossible for us to say, whether they were relevant to the issue or not: it is understood, however, that they were only offered for the purpose of showing that, in the negotiation of the parties, so far as it was shown by the letters, no allusion was made to the ditch. So far as they went, therefore, we do not see but that they were admissible for the purpose of showing, that the existence of the ditch, as an incumbrance, was overlooked by the parties, though they had full knowledge of it, as a fact. In this aspect, they were pertinent to the claim made in the petition, and though of no very great weight in themselves, we yet think the committee was correct in receiving them as evidence.
Secondly. The facts regarding the existence, character, and necessity of said ditch, and the knowledge thereof by the defendant, seem to us to have been clearly admissible. We can conceive of no ground, upon which the existence of the ditch, and the knowledge of the defendant of it, for a period of sixty years, could be objected to. Its existence, as a permanent incumbrance, is the main ground and foundation of the application for relief. If it had no existence, the defendant would have no claim under the covenants in his deed, and the plaintiff would be"under no liability to be relieved against. And if the defendant had had no knowledge of it, surely there could be no claim that he ought, in equity, to give up any security, that the covenants in the deed give him against it. And the character of the ditch itself might, 'and no doubt did, tend very conclusively to show the knowledge of the defendant of it, as an artificial structure. It was so covered for about half its distance, as not to be visible, but when it became visible, it would seem that its inspection would show very clearly whether it was, *541or was not, an artificial structure, bringing the water from the mill, or whether it was a natural spring which formed the stream that flowed from it, where it was first visible.
The fact that the blacksmith’s shop, and engine-house, on the premises, were excepted from the deed, went to show that it was the intention of the parties to except from it whatever incumbrances there might be upon the land, that the plaintiff had no right to convey.
If we are correct in what has been said, it follows that-the committee, in finding the facts in the case, did not act upon any illegal or improper evidence. Indeed, we are inclined to think that the error of the superior court, in setting aside the report, consisted in reviewing the finding of the committee upon the evidence itself, rather than in confining itself to the simple question of the admissibility of the evidence, to prove the facts for which it was offered. It is always the province of the court, to supply any defect in the report of a committee, in not finding all the facts which are in issue, and which may be important to a decision of the case: but we do not understand that it belongs to the court to pass upon evidence which has once done its proper office before a committee, in enabling the committee to find facts upon it, any more than to review the finding of a jury, upon evidence submitted to it for the purpose. From the existence and notoriety of the incumbrance, its long standing, and the long acquaintance of the parties with it, as a permanent thing, the fact that no mention was made of it in the negotiation, though other incumbrances were mentioned in the deed and excepted, the committee drew the inference, that it was the intention of the parties that it should be excepted from the deed. The court, on the contrary, was of opinion that nothing was done by the parties, from which such an inference could be made. Had this been a mere legal inference, as seems to have been the opinion of the court, it might properly be reviewed, but, as we think it an inference of fact, made by the committee, from other facts and circumstances *542proved, the inference of the committee must conclude it. Besides, it no where appears that the evidence alluded to was the only evidence before the committee on the point, but assuming that it was, the argument in favor of the finding of the committee is very strong. An express warranty on the sale of personal chattels, does not apply to visible defects, because the fact that the defect was plainly visible is evidence that the purchaser knew it, and did not take his warranty on account of it. This principle does not apply in the case of a warranty by deed, because the terms of a deed can not be contradicted, or varied, by parol, and undoubtedly a man may, if he will be so fool-hardy, make an express warranty in a deed, where he knows that it is broken, at the moment the deed is delivered, and knows also that the fact is well known to the party to whom he gives it. But, ordinarily, we suppose that parties do not, in this open way, intentionally involve themselves in law suits. And we do not see why the plain, open, visible, and notorious character of this incumbrance, connected, as it was, with full knowledge of the parties of its existence, does not furnish evidence that it was not intended by the parties to be warranted against, upon a principle, analogous to that which applies to visible defects, in the sale of personal chattels by parol.
The defendant insists, that the long continuance of the ditch across the land, together with full knowledge thereof on his part, furnishes no evidence of the existence of the grant under which it has been maintained. ■ Whether White had knowledge of the terms of the instrument itself, we do not think important. He knew that the structure had, for very many years, been maintained, and used, by the mill-owners, to convey the water from the mill; and that it was a permanent structure. He could only infer from this, if he did not know the precise terms of the grant, or did not know that there was a grant in fact, that the mill-owners owned the right, as appurtenant to their mill, and that it was a right in fee, even if acquired by adverse use, *543for the long time it has been in existence, and he ought not now to complain that the right, by the grant itself, is less than he had a right to suppose had been acquired. But he had such knowledge as was sufficient to put him upon enquiry, which in equity is sufficient notice.
The defendant’s counsel seem to suppose that there could have been no intention to except the right to maintain the ditch from the deed, because the parties said nothing about it. But courts will often found decisions and judgments upon the presumed intention of the parties, where nothing has been said. A man is presumed to intend the natural and probable consequence of what he does; and on this principle many persons have been found guilty of the highest crimes. A man is presumed to accept of a conveyance of property, made to him, on the ground that, it being for his benefit, he would naturally wish to receive it; and on this principle titles have been established. Indeed, we always draw inferences from our observation of the usual habits of men, which lead to a great variety of presumptions. These, inferences are the conclusions drawn by reason, and common sense, from premises established by proof; and are as applicable to questions of intention, where the intention of parties becomes important, as to any other disputable fact. It is true, as remarked by Judge Story, that if the proofs are doubtful and unsatisfactory, and the mistake is not made entirely plain, equity will withhold relief, on the ground that the written paper ought to be treated, as a full and correct expression of the intent, until the contrary is established beyond reasonable controversy. But this does not mean that there must always exist direct, and positive, proof that the instrument does not express the true intent of the parties, in order to justify the court in'reforming it. To give any such construction to the rule, would be to deny any right in a court of equity to interfere, unless the instrument could be shown to vary from written memoranda of the terms of the contract from which it is drawn up, or some evidence equally decisive. *544We do not so understand the rule. And upon the whole case, we are unable to see that the committee acted upon any improper evidence, or that he drew wrong inferences or conclusions from the evidence before him. We therefore advise the superior court to accept the report of the committee, and to grant the prayer of the bill.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Decree for plaintiff.