Bassett v. Salisbury Manufacturing Co.

43 N.H. 249
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 43 N.H. 249 (Bassett v. Salisbury Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bassett v. Salisbury Manufacturing Co., 43 N.H. 249 (N.H. 1861).

Opinion

Bell, C. J.

The plaintiff moves that this plea may be set aside on several grounds ; (1) because it is a mere dilatory plea; (2) and because a former dilatory plea having been pleaded, two dilatory pleas successively are not allowed.

Neither the present nor the former plea seem to us dilatory. Both go to the merits of the case. Neither suggests any defect in the proceedings. The last is pleaded to the whole bill, and if allowed, it is a final answer to the bill. It seems intended for a denial of the main fact, on which an injunction is asked, that the defendants have flowed the plaintiff’s land. On this ground the plea can not be set aside.

(8) Another ground is, because the amendment of the bill was not such as to require or justify the filing of this plea. We understand the rule to be general, that if the plaintiff amends his bill, the defendant is entitled to answer anew, or to amend his answer, or plea, as to matter of substance, in any way he pleases. 1 Dan. C. P. 468; Trust Co. v. Jenkins, 8 Paige 592; Bosenquet v. Marsham, 4 Sim. 573; Gambier v. Laheup, 1 Dick. 44; Richardson v. Richardson, 5 Paige 58; 1 Barb. Ch. Pr. 195.

(4) Another ground is, because the plea is not under oath. The general rule in courts of chancery is, that pleas must be under oath; 2 Dan. C. P. 791; and if not so verified, application may be made to set them aside, or to have them taken off the file. Heartt v. Corning, 3 Paige 566; 2 Dan. C. P. 786; 1 Newland C. P. 117; Story’s Eq. Pl. 541, sec. 696; Adams’ Eq. 341; Dunn v. Kugin, 3 Scan. 292.

By our 10th general rule, a party may avail himself of any defense as well by answer as by plea. The 9th general rule, which dispenses with the oath to the answer, unless an answer under oath is required by the bill, is in terms applicable only to answers.

The object of the rule was to save parties the trouble and delay growing out of the stringent rules applicable to pleas; and we think there is no reason for departing from the ordinary rule of the courts of chancery. A plea is regarded as an answer under the usual rule for time to answer, but it is held not an answer within the meaning of the New-York statute, under which the complainant has waived an answer under oath. Heartt v. Corning, 3 Paige 566. On this ground the plea must be set aside.

(5) Also, a further reason for the motion is, because the plea, though pleaded to the whole bill, is not an answer to the whole.

1. It is not a direct and positive answer to the allegations, but is merely argumentative.

The plea is designed as a complete bar to any relief by injunction. It denies that for more than three yeai’s past before the filing of the bill, the defendants had any interest in, or control over the dam, by means of which it is alleged in the bill, that the flowage has been caused, or in any other dam over said river, or that they have maintained, eontroled, or interfered with said dam in any way. The plea seems to us clearly argumentative. It is not asserted in the bill, that the defendants had any right, title, or interest in any dam, or any authority, or power to interfere with, or control the water of [252]*252the river, or any dam on it. If such a statement had been made, it would not be so far material, that the right of action would depend upon it. The gist of the action is the flowing, causing the water of the river, &c., to overflow, percolate, and drown the land; and that might be done without any title to the dam, or right to control the dam, or the water. The ground of the plaintiff’s complaint is, that the injury of which he complains, was done without right. To make the plea effectual, it should have denied that by means of such dam, or otherwise, they had caused the water to overflow, &c.

In pleas in equity, there must in general be the same strictness and exactness, as in pleas at law, at least in regard to matters of substance. Story’s Eq. Pl. 503; Bartlett v. Green, 8 Pick. 111;. Welf. Eq. Pl. 248. The plea must not be argumentative. Wood v. Mann, 1 Sum. 506; Lube Eq. Pl.. 248. The language must be such as to include all intendments. And if a case can be supposed, consistent with the facts pleaded, which would render the plea inoperative as a full defense, and which is not excluded by particular averments, the plea is bad. Whitlock v. Fish, 3 Ed. Ch. 131; Daniels v. Taggart, 1 G. & G. 311.

It is a well settled doctrine in equity as well as at law, that all who aid, advise, or encourage a wrong, are responsible as wrongdoers. The Salisbury Mills may have had title to the dam, and may have controled and regulated the water, so as to overflow the plaintiff’s land, under the advice and encouragement of the defendants, so that on proof of that fact, the bill could be maintained against them. The plea, consequently, is not in every supposable case, a defense.

2. It is insisted the plea is not an answer to the whole bill, because it does not cover the whole time. The. bill alleges the plaintiff’s land to have been flowed since August, 1854, while the plea denies the ownership of the dam, or any control of the water, since May, 1857. As to the flowage between those dates, nothing is said.

Bills to restrain nuisances are brought and supported on the ground of preventing irreparable injury, or of avoiding a multiplicity of suits. Their object is a perpetual injunction to prevent actual or threatened mischief. As incident to the relief by injunction, courts of equity will in proper cases consider and settle the question of damages; but no bill will be entertained, merely for the purpose of settling the damages, that being regarded as the proper province of the courts of law. Bailey v. Taylor, 1 R. & M. 73; S. C. Tamlyn 295; Adams’ Eq. 500.

It results from these principles, that any defense, which goes to the whole ground of the relief by injunction, is fatal to the bill, and such defense being sustained, the court will not retain the bill for any purpose of settling the damages.

If then, the plea in this case showed a complete bar to the relief by injunction, it would be no valid objection to it, that it did not apply to the whole time of the flowage alleged in the bill.

It is suggested that the Salisbury Mills is the same company as the Salisbury Manufacturing Company; the same corporation under [253]*253a new name. If that should be proved, it would do away the whole force of the plea.

The rules applicable to pleas in equity are somewhat stringent; and it is often a somewhat embarrassing inquiry, what is to be done with them, owing to the difference in the modes of proceeding, and of the terms applicable to them, at law and in equity.

In equity, there is no demurrer to a plea, and no other step can be taken, until it is disposed of. It is dangerous to reply to it at once, because the replication is an admission of the sufficiency of the facts pleaded as a bar, if true. Hughes v. Blake, 6 Wheat. 472; Bogardus v. Trin. Ch., 4 Paige 178; Fish v. Miller, 5 Paige 26; Dawes v. McMichael, 2 Paige 345. Nothing is in issue except what is distinctly averred in the plea, and if that is established at the hearing, the plea is a bar to so much of the bill as it professes to cover. Fish v. Miller, 5 Paige 26; Cook v. Mancius,

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Related

Hughes v. Blake
19 U.S. 453 (Supreme Court, 1821)
Dows v. McMichael
2 Paige Ch. 345 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)
Souzer v. De Meyer
2 Paige Ch. 574 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)
Heartt v. Corning
3 Paige Ch. 566 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)
Bogardus v. Trinity Church
4 Paige Ch. 178 (New York Court of Chancery, 1833)
Fish v. Miller
5 Paige Ch. 26 (New York Court of Chancery, 1834)
Richardson v. Richardson & Wing
5 Paige Ch. 58 (New York Court of Chancery, 1835)
Cook v. Mancius
4 Johns. Ch. 166 (New York Court of Chancery, 1819)
Wood v. Mann
30 F. Cas. 445 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1833)

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.H. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bassett-v-salisbury-manufacturing-co-nh-1861.