State v. Sunapee Dam Co.

50 A. 108, 70 N.H. 458
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 A. 108 (State v. Sunapee Dam Co.) 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
State v. Sunapee Dam Co., 50 A. 108, 70 N.H. 458 (N.H. 1900).

Opinion

Blodgett, C. J.

December 7, 1820, upon the petition of certain mill-owners on Sugar river, which has its source in Sunapee lake, one of the public waters of the state, the defendants were incorporated and -made a body politic “ to sink the outlet of said lake at the source of said Sugar river to the depth of ten feet below the low-water mark of said lake, and to erect and maintain a dam there with suitable gates and flumes to the height of said low-water mark, for the benefit of the mills and mill privileges aforesaid; provided said corporation shall make or tender reasonable compensation for all damages which may accrue to individuals by the erection of said dam and works.” The corporation was organized the following year, and soon after its organization built a dam at said outlet, at a height which has remained unchanged, and by means of such dam has since controlled the outflow of the lake.

The present proceeding is to restrain an alleged infringement of public and private rights in and to the waters of the lake, through changes in the water level occasioned by the maintenance of the defendants’ dam and works, and is instituted under the general equity powers of the court, and particularly under section 8, chapter 208, of the Public Statutes, which provides that “any legal right, public or private, infringed by a change in the water level of a natural lake or pond, . . . may be ascertained and enforced in a constitutional manner on a bill in equity without prior ascertainment of the right by a suit at law; and rights of boating, fishing, and navigation may be enforced on a bill in equity brought by tire attorney-general in the name of the state.” The plaintiff, the state of ISlew Hampshire, complains of an infringement of the public rights of navigation and fishing, and of injury to its fish hatcheries. The plaintiff, the Woodsum Steamboat Company, complains of an infringement of the public right of navigation to its special damage, and of its rights as a littoral proprietor. The other plaintiffs are littoral proprietors upon the lake, and complain of an infringement of their rights as such.

It being found that the defendants have not drawn down the waters of the lake to a point below that authorized by their charter without any restriction as to times or seasons when it might be done, all the plaintiffs are apparently remediless upon this branch of their case if the legislature had authority to make the grant. While the question thus ‘presented is both interesting and important, as well as one upon which there is more or less diversity of judicial opinion in different jurisdictions, extended discussion of it is not now deemed to be necessary, in view of the recent decisions *460 in Conn. River Lumber Co. v. Company, 65 N. H. 290, and Concord Mfg. Co. v. Robertson, 66 N. H. 1, in both of which public, private, and chartered rights were exhaustively argued by counsel .and carefully considered by the court. An examination of those cases will show that the doctrine enunciated in both of them, so far as it is directly applicable to the present inquiry, is that while in this state lakes, large natural ponds, and navigable rivers are owned by the people, and held in trust by the state in its sovereign ■capacity for their use and benefit, such use and benefit are not limited to navigation and fishery, but include all useful and lawful purposes; and that the beneficiaries and the trustee, acting as a body politic and trustee, can authorize by their legislative agents even an extinguishment of the trust and an abandonment of the trust estate. Conn. River Lumber Co. v. Company, supra, 378, 384-388; Concord Mfg. Co. v. Robertson, supra, 6, 7, 8, 12, 19, 22.

These decisions, in addition to the high source whence one of them came, commend themselves to our judgment by their intrinsic' soundness.; and we are accordingly constrained to hold that the defendants’ charter was such an one as the legislature had the power to grant. If this be so, our duty is simply to construe the charter,— not to rejudge it. It is for the legislature alone, “as the sole depository of- the sovereignty of the state, ... to judge of the public interests and welfare in the disposition and use of its public waters.” As was well said by Mr. Justice Story in Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420, 605 : “ Whether the grant of a franchise is, or is not, on the whole, promotive of public interests, is a question of fact and judgment-upon which different minds may entertain different opinions. It is not to be judicially assumed to be injurious, and then the grant to be reasoned down. It is a mattter exclusively confided to the sober consideration of the legislature, which is invested with full discretion and possesses ample means to decide it. For myself, meaning to speak with all due deference for others, I know of no power or authority confided to the judicial department to rejudge the decisions of the legislature upon such a subject. It has an exclusive right to make the grant, and to decide whether it be, or be not, for the public interest. It is to be presumed, if the grant is made, that it is made from a high sense of public duty, to promote the public welfare, and to establish the public prosperity.” Such being the respective rights of the legislature and the court, the defendants’ charter can be annulled or modified, if at all, not by a court of equity, but only by the authority by which it was granted.

It follows from these conclusions that the mere lowering of the lake by the defendants to the charter point can afford the state and the public no well-founded ground of complaint if done in a *461 reasonable manner; and a fortiori, much less can the lowering of it only about two and one lialf feet, which, is the extent of the defendants’ acts in that regard, so far as appears. And certainly the littoral proprietors, as such, can have no better ground of complaint, because, as is well understood, in public waters there is no private ownership in the soil below ordinary high-water mark. The primary ground of their grievance, and the one from which all the others follow, is the uucovering of a portion of the land underlying the water between the high and low-water mark. “ But,” as is said by the defendants’ counsel, “ the state, and not these individual plaintiffs, is the owner of the lake and of the soil to high-water mark, and had a right to confer its use and enjoyment upon its grantee. If this affords some inconvenience to the plaintiffs in reaching the water, or lessens the enjoyment of residences upon or near the lake shores, there is no legal ground of complaint ; it is purely damnum absque injuriar See Fay v. Aqueduct, Co., 111 Mass. 27, 28, 29, and authorities cited.

But while the pkiintiff's have no well-founded ground of complaint occasioned merely by the lowering of the lake within the charter limit, the defendants, notwithstanding their charter, were bound to exercise the right so obtained in a reasonable manner, not only as to the plaintiff's, but as to all others having rightful interests upon the shores or in the waters of the lake, and are justly subject to liability for failure to do so. N evertheless, we think the rights expressly conferred by the charter must be

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 108, 70 N.H. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sunapee-dam-co-nh-1900.