Meredith v. State Board of Health

48 A.2d 489, 94 N.H. 123, 1946 N.H. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 27, 1946
DocketNo. 3547.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 A.2d 489 (Meredith v. State Board of Health) 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
Meredith v. State Board of Health, 48 A.2d 489, 94 N.H. 123, 1946 N.H. LEXIS 161 (N.H. 1946).

Opinion

Branch, J.

The following facts are stated in the reserved case:

The town of Meredith is located on the northwest shore of Lake Winnipesaukee. The town has an area of forty-five square miles and a population of twenty-two hundred persons, of whom approximately fourteen hundred reside in the village of Meredith oil the lake shore and the remainder in the rural sections of the town. The town has never had a public sewer system. Sewage disposal in the village section of Meredith has hitherto been and at the present time is met by property owners individually, including the town as proprietor of the town hall and fire station and the school district as proprietor of the public school houses. The town, the school district and the individual property owners maintain either earth privies, cesspools or septic tanks on their premises for sewage disposal. The village is built compactly and the surface soil is relatively impervious. For the removal of surface waters the town has constructed under and along Main Street a storm line or drain connecting with the lake. Sewer drains from some adjacent properties have been connected with the storm drain but without the consent of the town. The State Board of Health claims that these individual methods of sewage disposal constitute public nuisances and further that the sewage is finding its way from the village into Lake Winnipesaukee by seepage or overflow from privies, cesspools and septic tanks.

Lake Winnipesaukee is used as a municipal water supply by the city of Laconia and the village of the Weirs. Many littoral owners on the lake use its water for drinking and general household purposes. On June 21, 1907, the State Board of Health adopted certain rules *126 and regulations “for the protection of the purity of the waters of Lake Winnipesaukee and Lake Paugus,” among which were the following:

“1. No sewerage from any town or village system of sewerage, or from any private sewer, or from any cottage, hotel, farmhouse, boarding-house, camp, or other abode, or from any privy, stable or outbuilding, shall be allowed to enter Lakes Winnipesaukee or Paugus____
“4. No sewerage or drainage of any kind from any public building or buildings, and no animal or vegetable matter, or vehicle containing or having contained the same, and no deleterious matter of any kind shall be deposited in the waters of said lakes, or upon the banks of said lakes where it may contaminate the water of the same.
“5. Any town or city bordering upon the said' lakes shall construct such sewerage systems as may be necessary to relieve any village or congested sections so that the inhabitants thereof may comply with these regulations.”

Attested copies of these regulations and orders were posted by an agent of the board on September 12, 1933, at the town hall and post office in Meredith. One of the grounds upon which the plaintiff attacks the validity of these orders is that no notice of the meeting of September 21,1907, or of its object was given to the town of Meredith or to any other town or person nor was any hearing granted by the board to the town of Meredith or to any other town or person.

The State Board of Health was organized under the provisions of Laws 1881, c. 64, (R. L., c. 147) which defines its duties as follows:

“5. Duties. They shall take cognizance of the interests of health and life among the people; shall make sanitary investigations and inquiries concerning the causes of epidemics and other diseases, the sources of mortality and the effects of localities, employments, conditions and circumstances on the public health; shall advise and assist town health officers in making investigations into sanitary matters in their towns and shall take measures to diffuse among the people such information on the subjects above named as may be useful.”

Section 6 provides as follows:

“6. Drugs; Foods. They shall take cognizance of the interests of the public health, relating to the sale of drugs and foods and the adulteration of the same, and shall make all necessary investigations and inquiries in reference thereto. ...”

By subsequent enactments the board is given certain duties and powers relating to communicable diseases; the distribution of antitoxin; the supervision of recreation camps; it is given power to ap *127 point health officers and establish a laboratory of hygiene. It is given authority to provide for the protection of maternity and infancy; to administer plans for maternal and child health services. It is given authority to prohibit the use of common drinking cups and towels; to make regulations to avoid the spread of venereal diseases; to establish quarantines. By chapters 161 and 162 of the Revised Laws the board was given specific authority to appoint sanitary inspectors and supervise production of meat and food products and beverages. The control of cold storage plants has also been entrusted to the board, together with the enforcement of the statute regarding the purity and branding of foods and drags. Of special importance to the present case are the provisions of chapter 165, authorizing the board to make regulations for the prevention and removal of nuisances, and chapter 166 giving the board wide powers for the protection of the sources of water and ice.

Section 12 of the present law (R. L., c. 147) entitled “Powers,” provides: “The State Board of Health shall have authority:

“III. To make such rules and regulations as it may deem necessary for the administration of the provisions of the preceding paragraphs.”

It thus appears that the State Board of Health has been given wide authority to investigate and act in the field of public health in which expert investigations and findings may be necessary prerequisites to effective action and the general authority of the board has been frequently supplemented by additional grants of authority with reference to special situations. It is with reference to the board thus organized and empowered to act that we must consider the first question reserved by the Superior Court; namely, “Are the orders and regulations of ¡ the State Board of Health of June 21, 1907 and July 12, 1938 directing the town of Meredith to install ‘a suitable public system of sewerage’ in the village section of Meredith, within the powers conferred by statute upon the State Board of Health?”

The first and principal argument advanced by the plaintiff is that “the Legislature has granted to towns the option of deciding whether or not they will construct and operate public sewers (R. L., c. Ill) and the decision of the towns under such local option is final.”

By the provisions of R. L., c. Ill, s. 3, the mayor and aldermen of any city are empowered to construct and maintain “all main drains or common sewers which they adjudge for the public convenience and health.” Subsequent provisions provide for the construction and operation of such sewers as may be constructed and the establishment of sewer rents. The so-called local option provisions are found *128 in section 21 of the same chapter and are as follows: “21. Application op Chapter.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A.2d 489, 94 N.H. 123, 1946 N.H. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-state-board-of-health-nh-1946.