Proprietors of the Piscataqua Bridge v. New-Hampshire Bridge

7 N.H. 35
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 7 N.H. 35 (Proprietors of the Piscataqua Bridge v. New-Hampshire Bridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Proprietors of the Piscataqua Bridge v. New-Hampshire Bridge, 7 N.H. 35 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1834).

Opinion

PakkeR J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The answer in this case closes with a denial of the jurisdiction of this court as a court of chancery, because the plaintiffs, if they sustain any injury may have adequate remedy at the common law.

It would, perhaps, be the better practice to consider any objection of this character before a hearing upon the merits, even if it is not taken by a formal demurrer. 2 Johns. C. R. 369, Underhill vs. Van Cortlandt; 2 Caines’ Cas. in Error 40, 56, Ludlow vs. Simond.

The counsel, however, have placed no great reliance upon this exception, and it is very clear that it cannot be maintained.

The bill alleges that the defendants are about to erect a bridge at a certain place, within the limits of an exclusive grant to the plaintiffs — that they attempt to do this under a pretended right of an authority from the legislature of this State — that this is in violation of a prior grant from the State to the plaintiffs — that no compensation has been provided for them — that the erection of such bridge will be a great injury to them — and that they have no remedy at the common law to prevent such wrong.

If this be so, it must be apparent that the erection of a bridge by the defendants will operate as a great injustice upon the plaintiffs, and the case would be within the express power-given to this court, by statute, to grant writs of injunction whenever the same shall be necessary to prevent injustice.

If the defendants have no right, and proceed to erect a bridge, the plaintiffs may be without any adequate remedy ; [56]*56for upon a judgment at common law, for damages, against the New-Hampshire Bridge corporation, all the corporate property, being perhaps the bridge so erected, might be wholly insufficient to indemnify the plaintiffs for the invasion of their rights. The bridge might be to them useless, and of no value. The individuals concerned in its erection might be able to respond, and still the remedy be inadequate, as it might be difficult to ascertain the measure of the injury sustained.

An injunction is the appropriate remedy, if the right is clear. 1 Ves. sen'r 188, Hughes vs. Trustees of Morden College; 1 Johns. C. R. 611, Croton Turnpike Company vs. Ryder; 2 ditto 162, Gardner vs. Village of Newburgh; 5 ditto 101, Newburgh Turnpike Company vs. Miller; 7 ditto 334, Jerome vs. Ross; 9 Johns. R. 507, Livingston vs. Van Ingen. The answer admits, that the defendants are about to erect a bridge at the place specified, and claims a right so to do under the authority of the legislature ; and we must therefore proceed to enquire whether its erection will infringe the rights of the plaintiffs, and be the means of such injustice to them as should be prevented by a writ of injunction.

It is objected, on the part of the defendants, that the charter of the plaintiffs does not give them such limits that the erection of the proposed bridge, by the defendants, will interfere with their exclusive rights.

It is said that by the terms of their charter the plaintiffs had no right to build a bridge any where except between Bloody point and Furbur’s ferry, and that, taking the title of the act together with the sections cited, all the exclusive right of the plaintiffs, if they have any beyond the place occupied by their bridge, must be limited to Bloody point on the one hand, and Furbur’s ferry on the other — that if they have any claim of right above Furbur’s ferry, it can be only a right to preclude others from building a bridge, not to build one themselves-^ — that this cannot be a franchise — and that their exclusive limits cannot extend beyond the limits [57]*57in which they might erect a bridge. And if this be the true construction of the plaintiffs’ rights, the defendants allege that they can accomplish all they are attempting to do without any violation of the rights or franchises of the plaintiffs.

But we cannot restrict the grant to the plaintiffs by the title and preamble of the act. If we find within the body of the act an express and unequivocal grant of powers and rights not mentioned in the title or preamble, we cannot restrict the grant of those rights merely because the terms of such grant are more extensive than the terms of the title and preamble. 7 Pick. 455.

If the title had been an act to incorporate certain persons for the purpose of building a bridge at Fox point, the place where the plaintiffs erected their bridge, and the act itself granted to the corporation in explicit terms the right to build between Walton’s point and Nanny’s island, the grant could not be construed to be of the right mentioned in the title alone.

The sixth section of the plaintiffs’ charter gave them, in terms, the exclusive right of building and maintaining a bridge across the Piscataqua river, any where between Walton’s point and Nanny’s island; and there is, in this section, no reference to any other part of the charter by which this grant of power and right is to be restricted.

On the supposition that by the charter the plaintiffs were obliged to erect their bridge within the limits between Bloody point and Fur bur’s ferry, as specified in the third section, we see no reason, if the legislature may grant exclusive rights, to doubt their power to grant to the plaintiffs exclusive limits, connected with the grant of their bridge, even beyond the limits in which their bridge must be erected.

Such right of exclusion might be essentially necessary to ensure the erection and maintenance of the bridge, notwithstanding the bridge itself might be required to be erected [58]*58'within smaller limits, or at a definite place — and if so it was competent for the legislature to make such a grant, attached to the grant of the bridge, if they might lawfully grant any exclusive limits.

It might perhaps admit of question whether the sixth section did not give the plaintiffs power to erect their bridge any where within the exclusive limits designated in that section; but this is not material to the present case.

It is farther contended, that the plaintiffs’ charter gave them only the exclusive right of selecting a site for their bridge within certain limits, and that having made their selection and erected their bridge, the place of erection becomes thenceforth the only exclusive right which they can claim under their charter.

But we cannot adopt this construction of the grant, not only because such are not the terms in which the grant is made, but because it is apparent that such construction would defeat the object which must have been in contemplation in procuring and making the grant of an exclusive right.

The charter of the plaintiffs, then, confers upon them by its terms the exclusive right of building and maintaining a bridge between Walton’s point and Nanny’s island; and it is conceded that these limits cover the whole ground upon which the defendants claim a right to erect their bridge.

The next question is, whether this was a constitutional and valid grant.

The answer alleges, that at the time of this grant, one Levi Furbur had a right of ferry within those limits — that no compensation was provided for Furbur, and that the grant is unconstitutional and void.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.H. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proprietors-of-the-piscataqua-bridge-v-new-hampshire-bridge-nhsuperct-1834.