Opinion
02-01-1904
J. W. Acton, for complainants. William T. Hilliard, for defendant.
Suit for injunction by Aaron M. Oliphant and others against William Richman. On bill, affidavits, and order to show cause. Preliminary injunction awarded.
J. W. Acton, for complainants.
William T. Hilliard, for defendant.
GREY, V. C. (orally). The bill is filed only to restrain the defendant from cutting and removing ice on a mill pond in the county of Salem. It contains a copy of the lease made by the complainants to the defendant of a piece of land 20 feet wide by 24 feet long, the description of which is as follows: "A certain lot of land on the East side of the road leading from Sharptown to Salem County Almshouse at the edge of the mill pond and being 20x24 feet, for the term of ten years with the privilege of renewal for the purpose of building and maintaining an icehouse thereon." There is a further clause in the lease, which is in these words: "That the building to be erected on said ground shall not be used for any other purpose than as an icehouse, and if used for any other purpose than as an icehouse, then this lease to terminate and become void." The complainants allege that the defendant has cut or is about to cut ice from the complainants' mill pond, near the leased premises. The defendant has answered. He admits the lease to have been made as stated in the bill of complaint, or the copy annexed, but he says that the lease was intended by the parties to express not only a grant of land, but also of the privilege to use the ice from the mill pond, outside of the granted premises, for the purpose of filling the icehouse to be built on the land. In addition, affidavits are submitted to show, and the answer alleges, that it has been the custom of the defendant, subsequently to the making of the lease, from a period near the date of the lease, which was December 29, 1896, until the past year, to fill his icehouse from the complainants' pond; that the complainants made objection last year, and since that time the right to fill the defendant's house from the ice on the mill pond has been the subject of difficulty and disagreement between the parties.
It seems to me this matter is controlled by fundamental principles. The lease, undisputed by both parties, expresses no grant of any right to cut ice from the complainants' mill pond. Its terms are perfectly clear—a grant of a piece of land lying at the edge, but including no part of the mill pond, with limitations upon the right of the grantee or lessee to use the demised land for any purpose other than an icehouse. That is the meaning and extent of the words used in the lease, and no greater effect can be ascribed to it. There is neither ambiguity in the expressions of the lease, nor any doubt of the extent of the lands or privileges granted. If such were the case, the acts of the parties in taking and using the premises might be invoked to satisfy the doubts and interpret the real meaning of the grant. The fact that the lessee was permitted to take ice from the pond must necessarily, therefore, have been a mere license; that is, the owner of the pond permitted the lessee to take ice from his mill pond, just as he might have permitted him to take any other benefit. The mill pond belongs to the lessor. It is his property. He has a right to allow others to use it as long as he chooses to do so, and to stop them whenever he wishes. The lessee, in cutting ice for a number of years from the pond, accepted courtesies extended, but acquired no rights. The fact that a man permits another to use his lands once or twice, or 20 times, creates no obligation upon the owner so to do. If the complainant permitted the defendant to use the mill pond for 20 years, he could not be obliged to permit him to use it for 21, for the reason that a person who accepts a benefit or courtesyin another's lands or waters, extended to him by the free choice of the owner, does not exercise his privilege in a hostile way, asserting title or claim, but in acknowledgment of the owner's title. The defendant having accepted the extension of a courtesy by the voluntary action of the lessor, he cannot afterwards set it up to bind the lessor to continue to extend it beyond the time when he chooses to revoke it.
In these applications for injunction there are two elements which must be shown: One is the settled right or title of the complainant; the other is that this right in the thing in dispute will be irreparably damaged if the relief be not granted. I think it is entirely clear that the first element in the case, as to the established right of the complainant, is settled, and settled adversely to the defendant's claim. As to the other element: Irreparable damage does not mean that the complainant must show that all his financial transactions will be ruined unless the relief sought is granted. It means that, with reference to the particular right or property referred to in the bill of complaint, the complainant will be irreparably deprived of it unless the relief sought is granted. The situation is that the defendant claims the right—and insists upon the exercise of it— to go upon the complainant's land and use it as he (the defendant) chooses, against the complainant's opposition. There is no limitation apparently put upon the defendant's exercise of that privilege. He holds the icehouse near the complainant's pond, and he claims the right, against the complainant's prohibition, to go upon the complainant's pond, cut ice, and fill his own icehouse. I do not quite see why the limitation should be to the filling of the icehouse, because, as I have already determined, the grant of the piece of land was for the purpose of erecting an icehouse, and it does not convey the right to fill that house from the ice on the pond. If the defendant has a right to cut ice on the pond at all, he has a right to cut all the ice. If he does not choose to exercise it, that is another matter, but nothing defines any limitation confining him to the quantity which will fill the icehouse. If the defendant, carrying out his claim, cuts ice from the pond this year, he will have the same right to cut it next year. The complainants, to get any remedy, would thus be compelled to bring many damage suits. It is quite obvious that, the complainants' right being clearly established, they ought to have the protection of this court from such vexatious and repeated suits, thus settling the whole dispute in one litigation.
The argument advanced by the defendant's counsel that the complainants may get ice somewhere else on the pond than in the neighborhood of the defendant's icehouse, it seems to me, is not pertinent at all. An owner is not called upon to submit to losing a portion of his property because he can conveniently or profitably use other portions. He has an absolute right to determine, even unreasonably, whether he will keep it or part with it, and under what conditions he will permit another to enjoy it. It is obvious enough that no one can rightfully say to an owner, "You ought to permit me to use and enjoy this portion of your property, because in another part of it you can get all the benefit from it which you need." Such a proposition cannot be maintained.
I think, therefore, that the complainants have shown not only an established right, but also, when properly understood, a threatened condition of irreparable damage. A preliminary injunction ought to go according to the prayer of the bill.