Concord Manufacturing Co. v. Robertson

25 A. 718, 66 N.H. 1
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 25 A. 718 (Concord Manufacturing Co. v. Robertson) 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
Concord Manufacturing Co. v. Robertson, 25 A. 718, 66 N.H. 1 (N.H. 1889).

Opinion

Doe, C. J.

By the grant of the original township of Gilmanton (including territory afterwards set off as Gilford, and Belmont), made in 1727 and amended in 1729 by the provincial executive in the name of the king, the premises were bounded by two lines, one running from the westerly corner of Barnstead north-west “ to Winnipesaukee Pond or the river that runs out of the said Pond,” the other running from the westerly corner of Barnstead north-east six miles on the Barnstead line, then north-west two miles, “ then north to Winnipesaukee Pond, then on the said Pond and river to meet the first line.” The river Winnipesaukee, running out of Lake Winnipesaukee, flows into and out of Sanbornton bay (now commonly called Lake Winnesquam). The title of the township of Gilmanton passed from the king to the grantees as private owners and tenants in common (Lawrence v. Haynes, 5 N. H. 33, 37, Att’y Gen. v. Tarr, 148 Mass. 309, 311), and their water boundary was the lake, the river, and the bay. Besides being a conveyance of land to the persons named as grantees, the grant was a town charter, issued to “the said men and inhabitants or those that shall inhabit said town;” and it contained no express allusion to a distinction between the boundary line of tlie private land-title, and the jurisdiction line of the municipal corporation.

In State v. Gilmanton, 9 N. H. 461, the town was indicted for not repairing Mosquito bridge, which connected Gilmanton and Sanbornton at a place where the boundary was either a part of the river or a part of the bay. In the agreed statement of facts oir which the case was first submitted, it is said (p. 462) that the “ bay is about ten miles long, and from two to three miles wide in the broadest part;” that "the bridge is “ about thirty-seven rods long;” and that “ there is so much current where this bridge is, *3 that no ice forms about it.” It was held that the agreed statement must be discharged for a trial of the question whether the water at the bridge was a river. If it was a river, the centre of it was the line to which the town was bound to repair. If it was not a river, but a part of the bay which is a large pond, the boundary of private land-title at that place was the water’s edge. It was assumed that the line of private ownership was the limit of the defendants’ territorial jurisdiction and public .duty. And upon this assumption it was necessary to ascertain whether the water under the bridge was river or pond. The ground of the decision is stated (p. 468) by Parker, C. J. “ Where a grant is made ■extending to a liver, and bounding upon it, the centre of the stream is the line of the boundary. . . . But in relation to grants bounding on ponds, lakes, or other large bodies of standing fresh water, that principle does not apply, but the grant extends only to the water’s edge. ... If, therefore, the line of the township of Gilmanton . . . strikes a river, and the boundary is then upon a river, the grant extends to the thread of the river; but if it strikes any large body of standing water, by whatever name it is called, it will go only to the water’s edge.”

At the subsequent trial, the court instructed the jury that “ the point for them to settle was whether there was a current or not; and if they should find that there was a regular, steady, and perceptible current, however small, it mattered not what was the width of the water, or what it was called, it was a river, and the defendant was liable to maintain the bridge.” State v. Gilmanton, 14 N H. 467 , 470. The defendants, being found guilty, moved for a new trial, and contended (p. 472) that if the instructions given to the jury were correct, “ then are all our large lakes and bays . nothing in fact but rivers, for in all of them there must necessarily be a small current towards the outlet; and if the current be the only thing that decides the character of our inland waters, then must, these lakes and bays be decided to be private property, and the towns adjoining ... be liable to erect bridges over the same.” It was held (pp. 476, 477) that “the fact that there is a current from a higher to a lower level does not make that a river which would otherwise be a lake; ” that the definition of river on which the verdict was found “ would not be applicable to all bodies of water in which there might be a current ;” that the instruction given to the jury “ must, of course, be taken in connection with the subject-matter to which it related ;” and that “ where it is admitted, or certainly not denied, as in the present case, that the water is not a lake, nor a pond, the material difference between which is in size, the only criterion by which to determine whether it is a river is the existence of a current.”

An admission that the water was neither lake nor pond would have been an admission that it was a river, and would have left no question for the jury. Judicial notice was taken of the geography *4 of the country (p. 477), a knowledge of which might enable the court to decide whether the water at the bridge was a part of the river or a part of the bay. The question might be one of fact, on the tidal of which the current might be one of the items of competent evidence, and for the decision of which a legal test might not be necessary. A view, taken by court or jury, without a ruling or instruction on any question of law, might be enough. To ocular proof could be added other evidence of the current, the quantity of water, and the comparative size and form of the basin of the bay and the channel of the river. The judgment, ordered on the verdict, established the fact that (for the purposes of that suit) the water under the bridge was a part of the river. At some place, the water ceases to be Winnipesaukee lake, and begins to be Winnipesaukee river. Further south, it expands into another large pond, from which it issues, still further south, as a river. At each of these places of expansion and contraction, the boundary of private land-owners runs from the water’s edge to the middle of the river. The second decision in the Gilmanton case seems to determine that a current is not the only competent evidence of the points at which these changes occur in the boundary line

However unsatisfactory State v. Gilmanton may be on the mode of finding the line between large ponds and streams running into or out of them, on other subjects it is clear and decisive. A large pond is not private property. When land, granted by the government to individuals for private use, is bounded by such a pond, the boundary is the water’s edge. Sanbornton bay is a large pond. It does not appear that there had been any doubt on these points in this state before the first decision of the Gilmanton case in 1838. Since that time they have not been open questions. In respect to title, the law divides natural fresh-water ponds into two classes, — the small, which pass by an ordinary grant of land, like brooks and rivers, from which, as conveyable property, they are not distinguished, — and the large, which are exempted from the operation of such a grant for reasons that stop private ownership at the water’s edge of the sea and its estuaries. Tide-waters and large ponds are public waters. Whatever exceptions, if any, may be found, this is the rule.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A. 718, 66 N.H. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concord-manufacturing-co-v-robertson-nh-1889.