Town of Dartmouth v. Silva

90 N.E.2d 832, 325 Mass. 401, 1950 Mass. LEXIS 1082
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 90 N.E.2d 832 (Town of Dartmouth v. Silva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Dartmouth v. Silva, 90 N.E.2d 832, 325 Mass. 401, 1950 Mass. LEXIS 1082 (Mass. 1950).

Opinion

Spalding, J.

The town of Dartmouth alleges in its bill that the defendants have wrongfully filled in the bed of a natural stream so as to obstruct and divert its flow. Because of such obstruction and diversion, it is alleged, floods have resulted “which have interfered with travel by the public on the ways of the town,” nearby properties have been overflowed and rendered unfit for use, adjacent roadways have been washed out (thereby causing expense to the plaintiff for their repair and maintenance), the breeding and prevalence of mosquitoes in the area have been accentuated, the health of the residents in the community has been endangered, and a nuisance has been created. The plaintiff asks that the defendants be restrained from obstructing and diverting the stream, and that they be ordered to remove the existing obstructions. The defendants in their answer deny these allegations, and by what is in effect a counterclaim (although not designated as such) allege that the plaintiff has illegally and to their great damage diverted accumulations of surface water over their properties; they ask for injunctive relief.

The case was referred to a master under the usual rule. Rule 86 of the Superior Court (1932). An interlocutory decree was entered confirming the master’s report and overruling the defendants’ exceptions to the report. The findings of the master include the following: The defendants Guilhermina C. and Mary Silva, husband and wife, own two lots of land in the vicinity of Prospect Street in the town of Dartmouth. The defendants Joseph V. and Annie M. Bet-tencourt, husband and wife, also own land in this vicinity. Originally the property owned by the defendants was a part of a large tract of farm land. In 1913 this land was subdivided and streets were laid out, “among which were Prospect, Merrimac and Pearl where the several lots [which are] the subject of this controversy are located.” Prior to *403 1913, and for some time subsequent thereto, the area included in the subdivision was sparsely settled. “There were three main thoroughfares used for travel at that time, viz: Dartmouth Street, Rockland [Street] and Sol-E-Mar Road.” There is an underground ditch equipped with catch basins in Dartmouth Street, and a culvert runs across Dartmouth Street into a swamp comprising eight and one half acres which borders on both sides of Sol-E-Mar Road. The swamp and the surrounding area are drained by a brook which “meanders until it comes to Prospect Street.” At that point it passes under Prospect Street through a culvert, flows through lands of the Silvas and the Betten-courts, and continues on into the Atlantic Ocean. This is a “well defined brook which has been there for many years” and it drains and “carries off the surface waters from the slopes in that area.”

The Silvas “diverted the course and filled in the bed of this brook or natural stream from where it ran through . . . [the] culvert under Prospect Street.” As a result of what the Silvas did, the Bettencourts, whose land was below the Silvas’ property, “also caused the bed of the . . . [brook] running through . . . their land to be filled in and diverted in another direction, thereby causing the flow of the waters therefrom to become obstructed and flow or spill over the town ways.” While the Silvas and Bettencourts through “their actions have caused the waters ordinarily flowing through said watercourse to spill and overflow onto the town ways, and property owned by other inhabitants of . . . [the] town,” the master was “unable to find any specific damages on account thereof as there was no-evidence submitted to . . [him] in relation” to this matter.

A final decree was entered enjoining the defendants from further obstructing or “rerouting the flow of the waters of the brook running through the properties of the several defendants, from its original and natural course.” The decree also ordered the defendants to remove all existing obstructions from the brook. The defendants appealed. Since no questions touching the report of the master are before us, *404 the question to be decided is what decree ought to be entered on the facts found by him. Zuckernik v. Jordan Marsh Co. 290 Mass. 151, 156. In so deciding it is our duty to draw the proper inferences from the findings of the master unaffected by the conclusions of the judge. Greeley v. Flynn, 310 Mass. 23, 26.

The plaintiff grounds its right to relief on the existence of a nuisance. We construe the findings of the master as establishing that the brook which ran through the land of the defendants was a natural watercourse. See Luther v. Winnisimmet Co. 9 Cush. 171; Stanchfield v. Newton, 142 Mass. 110, 116; Yaskill v. Thibault, 273 Mass. 266, 268-269. The obstruction of a watercourse so as to cause the water to flow over a highway is a public nuisance. Commonwealth v. Stevens, 10 Pick. 247. Commonwealth v. Fisher, 6 Met. 433, 437. New Salem v. Eagle Mill Co. 138 Mass. 8. “An information in equity by the Attorney General is the normal remedy for the abatement of a public nuisance.” Mayor of Cambridge v. Dean, 300 Mass. 174, 175. Attorney General v. Jamaica Pond Aqueduct Corp. 133 Mass. 361, 363. Attorney General v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 246 Mass. 292, 296. But where a town in its corporate capacity has sustained special or peculiar damage it may bring a suit to abate the nuisance. Thus, where the interference with a public right of way is of such a nature that a town may be put to expense in repairing the way, or may be liable for damage sustained from its obstruction, it has been held that such a suit may be maintained by the town. Springfield v. Connecticut River Railroad, 4 Cush. 63, 67-68. New Salem v. Eagle Mill Co. 138 Mass. 8, 10. See Andover v. Sutton, 12 Met. 182, 189; Needham v. New York & New England Railroad, 152 Mass. 61, 63. In Springfield v. Connecticut River Railroad the town sought to restrain the defendant from running its trains over a track laid on a public highway on the ground that such maintenance of the railroad was unauthorized and constituted a nuisance. It was contended that the town had no such interest in the preservation and protection of the highways as would en *405 title it to apply to a court of equity to restrain and prevent such nuisance. This court per Shaw, C.J., said, “we are inclined to think, that as the town is responsible for the construction and amendment of highways and town ways and for damages to travellers for losses occasioned by obstructions and defects, they have a right to invoke the equity power vested in this court, in cases of nuisance, to determine whether such a use of the ways, as is claimed by the defendants in the present case, is or is not a justifiable act under the powers granted them” (pages 67-68).

The reasoning of that case, we think, supports the present suit.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.E.2d 832, 325 Mass. 401, 1950 Mass. LEXIS 1082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-dartmouth-v-silva-mass-1950.