Smith v. State

486 A.2d 289, 125 N.H. 799, 1984 N.H. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 31, 1984
DocketNo. 83-429
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 486 A.2d 289 (Smith v. State) 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
Smith v. State, 486 A.2d 289, 125 N.H. 799, 1984 N.H. LEXIS 322 (N.H. 1984).

Opinion

Souter, J.

The plaintiff appeals a judgment under former RSA 249:38 (now RSA 236:39), rendered on a counterclaim filed against him by the State to recover the cost of repairing damage to a bridge and highway. At trial the plaintiff urged that equitable considerations barred a finding of liability against him. He seasonably objected to certain evidence offered to prove damages and has appealed the award of them. We affirm the finding of liability but reverse the determination of damages and remand for a new trial on that issue.

At all relevant times the plaintiff has owned land through which the Sugar River flows, immediately east of a bridge and State highway designated as Routes 11 and 103 in Sunapee. In 1978 he used the land in his construction business and often traveled over the highway and bridge to move equipment from one side of the river to the other. To obviate such travel and to increase the area of his land, he wished to channel the river through two culverts laid parallel, each one hundred fifty feet long and seven-and-one-half feet in diameter, which he would then cover with gravel to join the two riverbanks. He spoke of his proposal to some members of the State Department of Public Works and Highways (the highway department), who expressed reservations about it. One of them advised the plaintiff that he would need a permit from the special board (the predecessor of the present wetlands board to which, for simplicity, we will hereafter refer). The plaintiff later discussed his proposal with other employees and officials of the highway department and informed them that he planned to get a permit from the board.

Late in the winter of 1979, the defendant applied to the board for a permit to dredge the riverbed, to install the culverts and to cover them with gravel. Because the plaintiff could not read or write, an employee of the board helped him to prepare the application, which included a rough sketch of the proposed location of the culverts in relation to the highway and bridge over the river. On March 13, 1979, the board granted the permit subject to conditions not in issue here. On the same day it granted a permit to the highway department to widen the bridge over the river, below the proposed site of the culverts.

[801]*801By that time the culverts had been delivered to the riverbank. Later in March the State began the bridge project, and by April the plaintiff had begun to dredge the river to make way for the culverts. The board suspended his permit for a time due to excessive turbidity caused by the dredging, but by mid-April the board allowed the work to go forward. It did go forward, in full view of the employees and officials who were working on the bridge and inspecting the highway department’s work.

On the evidence it could be found that the State finished work on the bridge before the plaintiff placed the culverts in the dredged riverbed, in May. When so placed, the ends of the culverts extended twenty feet within the State’s property line and even beyond a line drawn between the ends of the bridge’s wing dams. A representative of the board inspected the site and made no objection. The plaintiff then placed the fill over the culverts. Several employees or officials of the highway department saw the culverts in place during the spring and summer of 1979, but none of them expressed any objection to what he saw.

On March 4, 1981, at the site of the bridge, a patrolman from the highway department found a hole in the highway, four feet wide, six feet long and six or seven feet deep. It later appeared that soil had washed away under three quarters of the length of the bridge abutment and under twelve feet of the road.

After temporary repairs and a State survey of the area in April, the State and the plaintiff each learned for the first time that the culverts overshot the boundary by twenty feet. For several months thereafter the State asked the plaintiff to cut the ends of the culverts back to the property line, but the plaintiff would not. In the summer and fall of 1981 the State made extensive repairs and modifications to prevent further erosion of the road. In October the State began to excavate the area around the downstream ends of the culverts, so that it could cut the lower twenty feet from each of them.

The plaintiff then began this action by petitioning for an injunction against tampering with the culverts. The superior court granted a temporary restraining order. The State answered the petition and filed the counterclaim charging liability under the present RSA 236:39 for causing damage to the highway. After an evidentiary hearing on November 6, 1981, the Superior Court (Nadeau, J.) approved the recommendation of a Master (Charles T. Gallagher, Esq.) that the restraining order be lifted. The State then shortened the culverts and completed its other work on the bridge and road in December 1981.

In August 1983 the same master heard evidence on the counter[802]*802claim. He recommended a verdict for the State in the amount of $20,000, and the Superior Court (Johnson, J.) ruled accordingly.

Under the plaintiff’s first assignment of error, he argues that the actions of State officials raise an estoppel against the prosecution of the State’s claim for damages. In essence the plaintiff argues that it would be inequitable to subject him to damages. He rests his position on dicta contained in Appeal of John Denman, 120 N.H. 568, 419 A.2d 1084 (1980), and on suggestions expressed in opinions in Institute for Trend Research v. Griffin, 101 N.H. 255, 139 A.2d 628 (1958) and State v. Stafford Company, 99 N.H. 92, 105 A.2d 569 (1954).

To assess the merits of the plaintiff’s argument, we must begin with an analysis of the basis for the liability asserted under the statute now cited as RSA 236:39. This simply provides that “[i]f any person shall . . . cause any defect... or want of repair of a highway which renders it unsuitable for public travel, without authority, he shall be liable to the state for all damages to the highway . .. .” The master found liability under this statute because “the culverts speeded up the flow of the river and discharged the water with greatly increased force at a point very close to the bridge abutment. The culverts were the cause of the damage.”

The plaintiff does not deny that there is an adequate evidentiary basis for this finding, and he does not claim that he had “authority” within the meaning of the statute. “Authority” that would bar liability under this statute is the subject of RSA 236:9, prohibiting the excavation or disturbance of “shoulders, ditches, embankments or the surface” of certain highways “without written permission from the state commissioner of public works and highways or his division engineer.” The plaintiff had no such written permission.

Nor did the written permit from the predecessor of the wetlands board purport to provide authority to affect the bridge or highway. Neither the plaintiff’s application nor the board’s permit referred to RSA chapter 236. The application referred to highways only in describing the location of the project proposed, and the permit did not refer to highways at all. By its express terms, the permit was issued under RSA chapter 483-A and purported to authorize nothing but dredging and filling.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
486 A.2d 289, 125 N.H. 799, 1984 N.H. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-nh-1984.