Bailey v. Inhabitants of Woburn

126 Mass. 416
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 126 Mass. 416 (Bailey v. Inhabitants of Woburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Inhabitants of Woburn, 126 Mass. 416 (Mass. 1879).

Opinion

Esdicott, J.

The town of Woburn was authorized by the St. of 1871, e. 307, “to take, hold and convey to, into and through said town, the waters of Horn Pond, so called, in Woburn, or the waters of any other pond in Woburn,” for the purpose of supplying its inhabitants with pure water. Full authority is given to the town to take land for tMs purpose, and to construct all works necessary for the distribution of the water; and provision is made that the town shall be liable for all damages caused by such taking and construction, which may be assessed in the manner provided by law with respect to land taken for highways, but no application for the assessment of such damages shall be made until the water is actually taken by the town. §§ 1-^á. It is provided in § 5 that three commissioners shall be chosen by the town, to whom is intrusted the execution and performance of all matters and things relating to the construction and maintenance of the water-works contemplated by the preceding sections.

The town accepted the act, and three commissioners were chosen, who proceeded to perform their duties under it. They took for the purposes named in the act, and we presume in accordance with its provisions, two and a quarter acres of.land on the shore of Horn Pond; and there dug and constructed a water-gallery and pumping-well, and erected an engine-house, and an engine to pump water into a reservoir built to contain it, and made a direct connection between the well and the pond by conduits or pipes.

1. It is stated in the record, that these pipes or conduits have [418]*418not been used; and it seems to have been assumed by both parties, at the trial before the jury, that the waters collected in the pumping-well, which are pumped into the reservoir and distributed to the inhabitants, do not flow through these pipes or conduits, but percolate into the well, either from the pond, or from underground currents intercepted by the well before they reach the pond.

The respondent contended that none of the water collected in the well and pumped into the reservoir flowed from the pond; and that it is not liable for taking water which perco lotes into the well from the pond, or from the land adjacent fr the pond.

The petitioner, on the other hand, contended that the appropriation by the town to its own use of the waters percolating from the pond, or from the land on their way to the pond, was a taking of the waters of the pond within the meaning of the St. of 1871, o. 307; and the presiding officer so ruled in substance, and to this ruling the respondent objected.

A forcible argument has been addressed to us by the respondent, touching the rights of landowners to appropriate to their own irse all underground currents of water found on their own land, and the claim is made that the town, for the purpose of constructing its water-works, had the same right to excavate within the limits of the land taken under the St. of 1871, c. 307, that a private individual would have to dig upon his own land, and use and divert to his own use the water so obtained; and that, as such private owner would not be liable to another whose supply of water was thereby diminished, the town in this case is not liable to the petitioner.

But, in the view which we take of this case, this question does not arise; and it is unnecessary to consider at length the numerous authorities cited, or to determine whether the ruling of the presiding officer was in all respects strictly accurate, for upon the facts reported we are of opinion that there was a taking of the waters of the pond within the meaning of the act, and the petitioner was entitled to have his damages assessed by the j™y.

The difficulty with the respondent’s position is that the land was not taken or purchased for the purpose of digging wells and [419]*419appropriating underground currents of water. The town had no authority under the act to take land for that purpose, or to obtain its supply from such a source, and originally had no intention of doing so. It could only take the waters of Horn Pond or some other pond in Woburn.1 and the case finds that it took this land under the statute on the shore of Horn Pond for the purpose of constructing thereon works and taking the waters of the pond. Such works were actually constructed for that purpose, and directly connected with the pond by pipes and conduits, thereby enlarging the area of the pond, and securing to the town, against all persons, the means of taking its waters. From the works thus constructed, it has supplied its inhabitants with water, and it is not contended that this petition is prematurely brought, under § 4, because the water has not been actually diverted and withdrawn. »

Upon the inquiry, therefore, whether, upon these.facts, the petitioner, under a petition properly brought, is entitled to damages, it is immaterial that the town discovered, after it began to pump up the water, that it could supply its inhabitants without using the connecting pipes and conduits, or that it can obtain a supply, abundant for its present needs, without using them at all. Under the powers conferred by the statute, the town has reserved to itself the right to take the waters of Horn Pond to supply the present and future wants of its inhabitants, and has provided itself with all the requisite iñeans for doing so; and while it has supplied its inhabitants from the works it has con structed, and has not for that purpose used the conduits and pipes directly connected with the pond, yet it may and has the right to use them, and, if necessary, undoubtedly would do so.

The answer of the town to the petitioner’s claim is, “ While we have clothed ourselves with all the powers given by the statute tq take the waters of Horn Pond, and under the powers conferred are distributing water, you can have no .remedy, because we have not drawn water through those connecting pipes and conduits put in foi that purpose, although we have the right to do so, if necessary.” If this ground is tenable, then the petitioner is without remedy, if the town should novi or hereafter use the pipes and conduits constructed for [420]*420that puipose. Ipswich Mills v. County Commissioners, 108 Mass. 363.

We are therefore of opinion, that the town has taken the waters of the pond within the meaning of the statute; and, having done so, the petitioner is entitled to recover damages for the injury thereby caused to his property.

2. It is contended by the petitioner, that, under the St. of 1871, c. 307, the town had the right to take all the waters of Horn Pond, and that it had no authority to take a portion. But this construction is not correct. The town can take only so much water as is required for the purposes named in the act. This includes not merely what is sufficient for the present wants of the inhabitants, and those for whom it was intended to provide, but for their future or prospective wants. Undoubtedly, power was granted to take all the waters of the pond, if all should be needed for those purposes; but the statute did not intend that all the water should be taken, if all was not necessary. As the petitioner could receive compensation but once, he was entitled to recover future and prospective as well as the immediate damages caused by the taking, but he could not recover damages for a diversion of all the water, unless by the taking all was to be actually diverted. Ipswich Mills v. County Commissioners, above cited.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Mass. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-inhabitants-of-woburn-mass-1879.