Northern New Hampshire Lumber Co. v. New Hampshire Water Resources Board

56 F. Supp. 177, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2142
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJune 27, 1944
DocketCivil Action No. 161
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 F. Supp. 177 (Northern New Hampshire Lumber Co. v. New Hampshire Water Resources Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern New Hampshire Lumber Co. v. New Hampshire Water Resources Board, 56 F. Supp. 177, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2142 (D.N.H. 1944).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

This action is brought by the Northern New Hampshire Lumber Company, a New Hampshire corporation, alleging that it is the owner of timber lands in the Town of Pittsburg, N. H., on which there is a large quantity of timber, wood and pulp; that the defendant, the Water Resources Board, acting under the provisions of the New Hampshire Statutes, Laws 1935, ch. 121, approved June 19, 1935, and amendments thereto, has constructed across the Connecticut River in the Town of Pitts-burg, an earthen dam entirely devoid of locks, sluices, or other devices for the free and unobstructed passage of interstate commerce; that the said dam was constructed by the defendant without obtaining the consent of Congress, and without submitting the location and plans therefor to the Chief of Engineers and the Secretary of War, as required by Act of Congress, and also without obtaining a license so to do from the Federal Power [178]*178Commission under the requirements of the Federal Power Act, U.S.C.A. Title 16, §§ 79 la-823.

The plaintiff alleges that its land is northerly from the dam and as constructed it prevents the plaintiff from transporting its product in interstate commerce by means of the navigable waters of the Connecticut River but is obliged to transport the same overland at a greatly increased cost.

This action was brought September 29, 1941, and seeks damages in the sum of $50,-000 and the abatement and removal of the dam.

The defendant filed an answer October 21, 1941, and on April 4, 1944, filed a substituted amended answer.

Nine grounds of defense are set forth in the amended answer which may be briefly summarized as follows:

1. The Court is without jurisdiction.

2. No legal right of the plaintiff is j eopardized.

3. Plaintiff is not entitled to have adjudicated the alleged public rights upon which it bases its claim for relief.

4. The complaint is a proceeding against the State of New Hampshire without its consent.

5. The complaint fails to state a claim against the defendant upon which relief can be granted.

6. Defendant admits the construction of the dam, but denied that it is entirely devoid of locks, sluices or othér devices; denies that the river is navigable at the site of the dam and admits that the locks, sluices and other devices in said dam are neither intended for nor adapted to the passage of interstate commerce.

7. Alleges that the defendant is a public or state agency permitted and authorized by Acts of Congress to construct the dam for and on behalf of the State of New Hampshire.

8. That the complaint is a proceeding against the State of New Hampshire without its consent; that the dam was constructed by the defendant acting as a public agency of the State of New Hampshire in accordance with the laws of said. State.

9. The Federal Power Commission found that the Connecticut River was not navigable at the site of the dam and that the interests of interstate and foreign commerce would -not be affected thereby.

The defendant further alleges that the plaintiff has disentitled itself to relief by its unreasonable delay in proceeding to enforce its alleged rights.

The foregoing grounds of defense are followed by a motion to dismiss the action. The motion was heard orally April 4, 1944, and briefs ordered to be furnished the Court.

In considering the defendant’s motion to dismiss the principal allegations in the plaintiff’s writ should be considered.

The complaint alleges that the Connecticut River at the site of the dam is a navigable stream; that a dam has been constructed across it in the Town of Pittsburg, leaving no sluiceway or other devices for the passage of logs in interstate commerce; that the plaintiff owns valuable timberlands on the Connecticut River above the site of the dam, and that’ it, and its predecessors in title have, previous to the construction thereof, transported in interstate, commerce, by means of the navigable waters of said river, large quantities of timber and wood to market.

Plaintiff’s counsel, in argument, waived so much of its complaint as sought the destruction or reconstruction of said dam and confined his client’s claim to damages already suffered.

Taking up the defendant’s points of defense seriatim, the first relates to jurisdiction of this court. The plaintiff is a New Hampshire corporation and the Water Resources Board is an adjunct of the New Hampshire State Legislature, therefore there is no diversity of citizenship.

The plaintiff claims that its action arises under the Constitution and laws of the United States; that the dam was constucted in violation of the Acts of Congress and the laws regulating navigable streams.

I hold that this court has jurisdiction under U.S.C.A. Title 28, § 41.

It is probably true that plaintiff’s right to use the stream, is not, strictly speaking, a legal right but a privilege or public right which the plaintiff shares with others. Whether this public right can be taken away to the damage of individual rights by Act of the State legislature raises a question of serious importance and goes to the very root of the question here invloved.

The Supreme Court of the State of New Hampshire in the case of St. Regis Paper Company v. New Hampshire Water Re[179]*179sources Board, 92 N.H. 164, 26 A.2d 832, decided since this action was commenced, holds that: “Individual members of the public are entitled to enjoy and use public waters only derivatively; their rights are not vested or property rights but are more properly privileges which may be taken away altered or qualified.”

Whether the State of New Hampshire has acted in violation of the laws of the United States in the construction of the dam is a legal question raised by the pleadings. If the dam was legally constructed, then the plaintiff’s privileges have been taken away, but if illegally constructed and serious damage has resulted, then it may have a right of action.

The next ground of defense is that this complaint is a proceeding against the State of New Hampshire without its consent.

The Water Resources Board was created by an Act of the State legislature, Laws of 1935, c. 121. Its general powers include that, “The corporation shall be liable to suit in the same manner as a private corporation and shall have the power to institute and prosecute, in its own name or in the name of the state, suits at law or in equity,” Section 5.

This section of the statute would appear to lend considerable force to the plaintiff’s argument that the State, through the Water Resources Board has consented to be sued.

The next contention is that the complaint fails to state a claim against the defendant upon which relief can be granted.

This ground of defense depends upon so many different angles that to enter into a discussion of them as an individual ground would require an extended review of all the questions involved in the final determination of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
56 F. Supp. 177, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-new-hampshire-lumber-co-v-new-hampshire-water-resources-board-nhd-1944.