Inhabitants of Ipswich

30 Mass. 431
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1832
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Mass. 431 (Inhabitants of Ipswich) 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
Inhabitants of Ipswich, 30 Mass. 431 (Mass. 1832).

Opinion

Shaw C. J.

drew up the opinion of the Court. The first question which the Court has been called upon to consider is, where the dividing line is between the towns of Ipswich and Hamilton. This depends upon the construction of the statute by which the town of Hamilton, formerly making with Ipswich one town, was set off into a separate town. Several depositions were taken and read in the cause, but we have considered them of very little importance, except so far as they show the localities, and thereby show the application of the provisions of this act of incorporation. In regard to these facts, however, there is no contradiction.

The act is the act incorporating the parish of Ipswich Hamlet, in the town of Ipswich, into a town by the name of Hamilton. Si. 1793, c. 10, § 1.

The boundaries, so far as the description affects the present question, are thus described. “ Beginning at Dodge’s stump, so called, where Manchester and Wenham lines meet, thence running westerly, northerly and easterly by Wenham and Topsfieid lines, and by Ipswich river, to a wall about ten chains below Barnabas Dodge’s mills; then by said wall™ &e.

The question depends upon the construction of the clause in Italics. The road crosses the river at a short distance above the mills, called in the act Dodge’s mills, and sometimes called Smith’s mills. At that place, then, the river constitutes the dividing line between the two towns.

It is not denied on the part of the town of Hamilton, who were notified, and who are in effect the parties in interest, that as a general rule, where a boundary line runs by a river, the central line or thread of the river, the jilum aquae, is in tended.

[436]*436But they contend, that by this description, as the boundary is “ by the river to a wall” and this wall is upon the bank of the river, on the Hamilton side, the whole body of the river must be, for some distance at least above this point, within the town of Ipswich, and that at the point where the new bridge is built, the river, by a fair construction, must be taken to be more than one half in the town of Ipswich.

The relative position of the wall and the river are thus described substantially by one who has known them intimately sixty years. The wall being nearly at right angles to the river, continued down towards the river, it ended where there is a stone marked I. H. now standing. That was the end of the wall. From the end of the wall there was a wooden fence about two rods, and beyond that the bank was so steep that a fence was unnecessary. The wall was built as far as the land would admit of its standing strong. It was a broken kind of bank; the wall was built, until the wall beyond began to fall or pitch. I understand that the stone above named marks the spot designated in the act of incorporation as “ the wall,” and stands on the brow of the bank on the Hamilton side of the river a few rods from the water.

Upon these facts, how does the boundary line run, as contemplated by the statute ? So far as it runs “ by the river,” which is understood to be for a considerable distance above Dodge’s mills and above the new bridge, it must be governed by the general rule, the central line of the river, to be ascertained, in the usual manner, at each particular point of the river, in regard to which the question may arise. But the question is, where does the line leave the central thread of the river, and cross the right bank of it to the wall ? We think it very clear, that it must at a point directly opposite to the end of the wall; or at that point at which the line of the wall, if protracted at right angles with the river, would "ntersect the central line of the river.

The description in the statute cannot literally apply, because a line extending and continuing by the river, can never actually touch the wall, at three rods from it. It must therefore have a reasonable construction, in order to carry into effect the intent of the legislature. This both parties admit; [437]*437one contending that it leaves the thread of the river, at some indefinite point above the mills and the bridge, and runs by a very acute angle, to the end of the wall, where the bound stone now stands ; the other party insisting that it must follow the thread of the river until that description becomes inapplicable, and it is necessary to leave for the wall which is the bound given, and that is at a point opposite to the wall. And we are of opinion that the latter is the most reasonable and probable construction, and therefore the one intended by the legislature.

Several reasons favor this construction.

As the legislature assumed the river as a natural and convenient boundary, it is to be presumed that that boundary was to be continued as far as it could be, that is, as far as the river runs in the same direction in which it was intended that the new town should extend.

Again, as the description in the act of incorporation is incomplete and leaves a hiatus to be supplied, that construction seems most to comport with the intention of the legislature, which leaves the defect in the line described the shortest and smallest.

It seems probable that the end of this wall was taken as the nearest permanent object, and the nearest point at which a permanent monument could be fixed ; it being inconvenient to fix a permanent bound mark in the water, or upon the precipitous banks of the river. This is the more probable, as the line was here to take a new direction, and that direction was to be given by the course of this wall.

The other construction seems to have nothing to recommend it. If the line might leave the centre of the river and take a direction diagonally towards the wall at ten rods above, why not at fifty or a hundred or a mile above ? It would render that part of the description u by the river,” vague, indefinite and ambiguous, and that without necessity or use.

The difficulty has probably arisen from a slight inaccuracy-in the wording of the description. Had it said, by the river to a point in a line with the wall &c., and thence by the wall &c., it would have precluded all doubt. As it is, we think [438]*438the meaning is the same, and as something must be supplied by construction, this construction will most effectually accomplish the purpose of the legislature.

From this view of the question of boundary, it follows as a necessary consequence, that all the expense of constructing that part of the bridge which lay on the south side of the central line of the river, was properly chargeable to the town of Hamilton, and that part only which lay on the northerly side of the same line, was chargeable to the town of Ipswich ; and it was not only competent to, but necessary that the commissioners should ascertain and determine the boundary line between the two towns, so far as this question was concerned, as incidental to a just and legal apportionment of the expense. The statute is express, that where the commissioners have caused the work, which the towns ought to have done but have failed to do, to be done and paid for out of the county treasury, they shall give notice of the expense to the delinquent towns and the part thereof which each town is to, pay. St. 1827, c. 77, § 7. The object is.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Mass. 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-ipswich-mass-1832.