MILL, estates.
Mills are so very different and various, that it is not easy to give a
definition of the term. They are used for the purpose of grinding and
pulverising grain and other matters, to extract the juices of
vegetables, to make various articles of manufacture. They take their
names from the uses to which they are employed, hence we have
paper-mills, fulling-mills, iron-mills, oil-mills, saw-mills, &c. In
another respect their kinds are various; they are either fixed to the
freehold or not. Those which are a part of the freehold, are either
watermills, wind-mills, steam-mills, &c.; those which are not so
fixed, are hand-mills, and are merely personal property. Those which are
fixed, and make a part of the freehold, are buildings with machinery
calculated to obtain the object proposed in their erection.
2.
It has been held that the grant of a mill; and its appurtenances, even
without the land, carries the whole right of water enjoyed by the
grantor, as necessary to its use, and as a necessary incident. Cro. Jac.
121, And a devise of a mill carries the land used with it, and the
right to use the water. 1 Serg. & Rawle, 169; and see 5 Serg. &
Rawle, 107; 2 Caine's Ca. 87; 10 Serg. & Rawle, 63; 1 Penna. R. 402;
3 N. H. Rep. 190; 6 Greenl. R. 436; Id. 154; 7 Mass. Rep. 6; 5 Shepl.
281.
3.
A mill means not merely the building, in which the business is carried
on, but includes the site, the dam, and other things annexed to the
freehold, necessary for its beneficial enjoyment. 3 Mass R. 280. See
Vide 6 Greenl. R. 436.
4.
Whether manufacturing machinery will pass under the grant of a mill
must depend mainly on the circumstances of each case. 5 Eng. C. L. R.
168; S. C. 1 Brod. & Bing. 506. In England the law appears not to be
settled. 1 Bell's Com. 754, note 4, 5th ed. In this note are given the
opinions of Sir Samuel Romily and Mr. Leech, on a question whether a
mortgage of a piece of land on which a mill was erected, would operate
as a mortgage of the machinery. Sir Samuel was clearly of opinion that
such a mortgage would bind the machinery, and Mr. Leech was of a
directly opposite opinion.
5.
The American law on this subject, appears not to be entirely fixed. 1
Hill. Ab. 16; 1 Bailey's R. 540; 3 Kent, Com. 440; see Amos & Fer.,
on Fixt., 188, et seq.; 1 Atk. 165; 1 Ves. 348; Sugd. Vend. 30; 6 John.
5; 10 Serg. & Rawle, 63; 2 Watts & Serg. 116; 6 Greenl. 157; 20
Wend. 636; 1 H. Bl. 259, note; 17 S. & R. 415; 10 Amer. Jur. 58; 1
Misso. R. 620; 3 Mason, 464; 2 Watts & S. 390. Vide 15 Vin. Ab. 398;
Dane's Ab. Index, h. t. 6 Cowen, 677.
MILL, money.
An imaginary money, of which ten are equal to one cent, one hundred
equal to a dime, and one thousand equal to a dollar. There is no coin of
this denomination. Vide Coin; Money.
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