Court Opinion

ID: 6423280
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:01:46.67314+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:52.285951
License: Public Domain

Holmes, J.
The case as now presented is different from that heretofore passed upon by this court. As the case then appeared, it was consistent with the facts found, and might have been inferred as a conclusion from them, that Carpenter, as owner of the Pomeroy lot, had a right to draw the water from the Emory spring to that lot across his other land, which now belongs to the plaintiff. Johnson v. Knapp, 146 Mass. 70, 75. The court below, without finding that Carpenter had no right to the water, had ruled that the plaintiff’s action could not be maintained; and it was held that that ruling was wrong. If an easement over the Emory lot was incident to the Pomeroy lot, it would have passed by the conveyance of that lot without mention had. the latter adjoined the former,, and plainly it ought to pass equally, notwithstanding the fact that some land of the grantor lay between the two, the Emory spring being the manifest source of the water supply for the Pomeroy lot, and the easement being reasonably necessary to the enjoyment of the premises conveyed. But in order to give the Pomeroy lot the benefit of this easement, it was necessary to grant the subsidiary *269easement of maintaining pipes across the land which lay between the dominant and servient estates. This court decided that a grant of such an easement was to be implied. The decision went no further, although the mode of statement went beyond the necessities of the case, and suggested obiter that the law would be the same if Carpenter was using the water without right. Probably the case before the mind of the court at that moment was one of a use under a claim of right, and under a belief that a right existed, although it did not exist in fact.
It now appears that there was' no easement over the Emory lot, and it would seem that the water was drawn from it only by license, which was revoked in 1885, since which time the Pomeroy house has been supplied from other sources. At all events, there is nothing to show that any one supposed that there was any right to take the water. We are of opinion that the former decision is not applicable to this state of facts.
It would be carrying the implication of grants too far to say that an easement in fee to maintain pipes shall be implied wherever pipes "exist, although without a right to water, in the hope that something may happen to give the permanent right to fill them. No ground for such a hope was shown in this case, and if the hope existed, it was not fulfilled. We think that no grant of a right to maintain the pipes reasonably could be implied for any longer time than the duration of the right to take the water for the sake of which the pipes were maintained." The actual right to the water was a mere license, revocable at any time. If an easement during the pleasure of a third person is an interest in land which is known to the law, it would need plain words to create it.
We have not found it necessary to consider how far the tests of necessity in the case of implied grants vary, if at all, from those suggested in Carbrey v. Willis, 7 Allen, 364, 370, Randall v. McLaughlin, 10 Allen, 366, 368, and Buss v. Dyer, 125 Mass. 287. See Pettingill v. Porter, 8 Allen, 1, 7; Oliver v. Dickinson, 100 Mass. 114; Watts v. Kelson, L. R. 6 Ch. 166, 171; Wheeldon v. Burrows, 12 Ch. D. 31; Bayley v. Great Western Railway, 26 Ch. D. 434, 458.
The argument for a reasonable strictness, drawn from the registry laws, in Warren v. Blake, 54 Maine, 276, 289, is illus*270trafced in this case, where the plaintiff bought a title which seemed clear from the deeds, without any knowledge of the existence of the pipes underground. We are of opinion that she took free from the incumbrance, and therefore that she shows no breach of covenant. Judgment for the defendants.