Bishop v. North Adams Fire District

45 N.E. 925, 167 Mass. 364, 1897 Mass. LEXIS 343
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 925 (Bishop v. North Adams Fire District) 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
Bishop v. North Adams Fire District, 45 N.E. 925, 167 Mass. 364, 1897 Mass. LEXIS 343 (Mass. 1897).

Opinion

Lathrop, J.

The St. of 1889, c. 144, authorized, in § 1, the North Adams Fire District, for the purpose of supplying said district, the inhabitants of North Adams, and the inhabitants of that portion of Williamstown lying adjacent and contiguous to the proposed main line of pipe through which the water was to be conducted, with pure water, for the extinguishment of fires, and for domestic and other purposes, to take by purchase or otherwise the waters of a certain brook and its tributaries in Williamstown, and convey the water through Williamstown and North Adams; and to 61 take and hold by gift, purchase, or otherwise, any land, rights of way, and easements necessary for obtaining, taking, and conveying said water and laying, constructing, and maintaining aqueducts, watercourses, reservoirs, storage basins, dams, and such other works as may be deemed necessary for collecting, purifying, storing, retaining, discharging, conducting, and distributing said water.”

By § 2, the fire district is required, within sixty days after any taking under the act, to “ file and cause to be recorded in the registry of deeds for the county and district in which such land or .other property is situated a description thereof sufficiently accurate for identification, with a statement of the purpose for which [366]*366the same was taken, which statement shall be signed by the chairman of the prudential committee of said fire district.”

By § 3, the fire district was given the power, for the purposes aforesaid, among other things, to make excavations, and to carry any pipe over or under any “ public way, highway, or other way, in such manner as not unnecessarily to obstruct the same”; and, under the direction of the boards of selectmen of the towns of North Adams and Williamstown, to “ enter upon and dig up such road, street, or way for the purpose of laying down, maintaining, or repairing any pipe, drain, or aqueduct.”

By § 4, the fire district is liable to pay “ all damages sustained by any persons or corporations by the taking of or injury to any of their land, water, water rights, rights of way, easements, or property, or by the constructing or repairing of any aqueduct, reservoir, or other works.” And damages are to be assessed and determined, in the case of any person sustaining damages as-aforesaid, in the manner provided by law when land is taken for the laying out of highways.

The petitioner is the owner of five lots of land in Williams-town, all of which, except one, abut upon a public highway, called the Back Road. The lots abutting on the highway havd in all an area of over fifty acres, and the lot not abutting on the highway is connected with the other lots, and has an area of about three acres. There are no fences between any of the lots.

At the trial in the Superior Court, there was evidence tending to show that on or about Novembér 15, 1889, a water pipe of the respondent was laid through the Back Road, which lies westerly of the petitioner’s land, until the pipe approached the southerly boundary of her land, when it crossed the highway to the west and passed southerly outside the limits of the way through the land of one Russell Briggs, through which a dike had to be constructed for the pipe; that in the road in front of the petitioner’s land the pipe was laid on the surface, and earth and soil were taken to fill the road and cover the pipe, and earth and soil were also taken and carried on to the land of Russell Briggs to construct the dike and to cover the pipe ; and that excavations were made into the land of the petitioner along the easterly side of the way in two places for about thirty feet, to obtain the earth and soil so used.

[367]*367The exceptions recite: “The petitioner testified that the excavations made by the agents of the fire district aforesaid in laying said pipe rendered it impossible to drive on to her said land.”

The petitioner also introduced evidence as to the value of her five lots of land at the time of the alleged taking, and damages for taking the same, contending that the description in the alleged taking embraced and included all of the lots.

The petitioner was allowed to put in evidence, against the objection and exception of the respondent, a certified copy of an instrument, recorded in the registry of deeds, which the petitioner contended was a taking of all of her lots. After the admission of this instrument, the presiding justice ruled that, upon the pleadings and evidence, the petitioner could not recover, and directed the jury to return a verdict for the respondent ; and the case comes before us on the petitioner's exceptions.

The principal questions which have been argued before us by the counsel for the respondent relate to the admissibility in evidence of the certified copy of the instrument of taking. .The objections made to this in the court below appear to be that there was no evidence of any vote of the respondent relating to the alleged taking of the petitioner’s land, nor how such an instrument came to be recorded, nor by whose authority it was made, nor whether the person whose name was appended was ever chairman of the prudential committee of the respondent.

We do not find it necessary to determine these questions, even if they are open upon the exceptions before us. For the purposes of the case we consider the alleged taking to be in evidence. The first questions to be determined, then, are what the respondent took, and how far the taking was authorized by law.

The instrument in question is dated on January 6, 1889, which is probably a mistake for January 6, 1890, as the instrument was recorded in the registry of deeds on the latter date, and the language of the instrument relates to a time between the two dates. It recites a taking, on November 15, 1889, under the St. of 1889, c. 144, of “ the sole and exclusive right and privilege at all times hereafter to lay down, keep, and for[368]*368ever maintain in good repair an iron pipe twenty-four inches in diameter (inside measurement) for conveying and distributing pure water for the purposes named in said act, in, along, and through a certain piece or parcel of land situate in Williams-town in said county, bounded on the north and east by land of Clarence Whitney, on the south by the Stevenson lot, so called, and on the west by lands of Russell R. Briggs and of Thomas Quinn, as the pipe of the said fire district is now laid. The - said water pipe of the said fire district is laid wholly within the limits of the public highway leading from North Adams to Williamstown, known as the Back Road, the fee of which is in the name and owned by Eleanor L. Bishop of North Adams in said county, subject to the public easement of a highway.” It is evident that thus far there was no attempt to take the whole of the petitioner’s land, or even an easement in the whole. The general language, employed covering the petitioner’s land and the'road is qualified by the words “as the pipe of the said fire district is now laid,” as well as by the words which state w'here the pipe is laid. The fair meaning of the instrument is simply that an easement was taken in the public highway. It is therefore immaterial that the entire tract was inaccurately described by stating that it was bounded on the north and east by land of Clarence Whitney, and on the south by the Stevenson lot, when in fact it was not so bounded.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 925, 167 Mass. 364, 1897 Mass. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-north-adams-fire-district-mass-1897.