Wilson v. Wentworth

25 N.H. 245
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 25 N.H. 245 (Wilson v. Wentworth) 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
Wilson v. Wentworth, 25 N.H. 245 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

Bell, J.

Two questions are raised by this ease. The first, upon the instruction given to the jury, relative to the length of time required by the statute to authorize the taking of lumber by the land owner to his own use; and the second, whether an appraisal of the damages is necessary before the land owner can convert the lumber to his use.

The statute in force before the Eevised Statutes, applicable to these questions, is that of December 28,1805, which in substance provided that if any lumber, — put into any river or stream running thereinto, — and by the water carried or lodged upon any improved land, and not taken away by the owner, or his agent, before the first day of May, annually, the owner of the land may detain such lumber till the owner of the lumber pay all damage; and if the parties do not agree upon the damages, they are to be settled by the selectmen, or three justices of the peace.

If such lumber is not removed by the owner on or before the first day of November, annually, the owner of such land may take and convert the same to his own use. Provided, that when the owner shall have paid the damage and cost, he shall have liberty to remove the same before the first day of May following.

We think the effect of this statute was not correctly stated in the instructions given to the jury. The owner of the land is authorized to take and convert to his own use such lumber as was put into a river or stream, and was carried or lodged by the water upon improved land, and was not taken away by the owner by the first of May, nor removed by the first of November. If such lumber is not removed, refers to the lumber before spoken of, which clearly must have been carried by the water on improved lands before the first of May.

This statute is penal, and is, therefore, to be construed strictly, but, nevertheless, so as to effect the intention of the legislature. Effect is to be given to the plain meaning of the language, and the strict construction to be applied only where the effect is reasonably open to question. Fairbanks v. [248]*248Antrim, 2 N. H. Rep. 105; Woodbury v. Thompson, 3 N. H. Rep. 194; Pike v. Jenkins, 12 N. H. Rep. 255.

It seems evident from the language of this statute, that it was not designed to apply to all eases where lumber should be carried by the water of rivers upon adjoining lands. Thus in the first clause, the application is limited to such “ lumber as has been or may be put into any river or stream,” clearly excluding all lumber which may have been washed away by freshets, and which had not been put in the river or any stream. The second clause is also restricted. It applies to lumber carried upon improved lands, though it is apparent that great injury might as well result from the lodging of masses of logs upon lands not improved, obstructing the water and causing the banks and intervals to be worn away.

The next clause upon which this question arises adds another restriction, — “which may not be taken away by the owner, &c., on or before the first day of May annually.” This applies only to lumber, which, being upon the improved land, is not removed on or before the first of May. All the subsequent provisions of the statute expressly and distinctly refer to such lumber as has been described, and not .to lumber generally. The cases of damage arising from lumber not put into the river or streams; from lumber not carried upon improved land; and lumber not capable of removal on or before the first of May in any year, because not then floated upon the land, are not embraced by this statute, and the parties are left to their remedies at common law.

This statute was apparently designed to protect the land owners from damages occasioned by mnning logs in the spring, when business of that kind is usually transacted, and the greatest danger is to be apprehended, leaving the cases casually arising at other seasons, to the ordinary remedies.

This statute came into discussion in the case of Walker [249]*249v. Sawyer, 13 N. H. Rep. 196, though no question was decided; and it seems evidently to have been the impression of the learned judge who delivered the opinion, that it could hardly have been intended that where the lumber should, come upon the land on the thirty-first day of October, it should be forfeited within two days after, without any appraisal.

In the charge under consideration, the court avoid the manifest unreasonableness of the construction, that the lumber should be deemed forfeited, after lying but a day or two upon the land, by holding that if the log was carried upon the land at any time so long before the first day of November, that the plaintiff could reasonably have removed itbefore that day, and it continued until that day without payment of damages, it was forfeited.

It seems to us that a construction which leaves a party to incur a penalty, not upon any definite misconduct, or upon any specified neglect, but upon an omission to do what he might reasonably have done, is too uncertain, and is not to be adopted unless it is necessary to avoid some greater mischief, not contemplated by the Legislature. Such would be this case, we agree, if no other mode existed of avoiding the construction which should create a forfeiture of lumber lodged immediately before the first of November.

In the case before adverted to, Walker v. Sawyer, an intimation is made that no forfeiture of lumber can be incurred unless there has been an appraisal of the damages. The point was not decided, and the intimation is thrown out with a queere, as a matter regarded by the judge as by no means clear.

It is upon the doubt thus suggested that the second point in the case is raised. We have examined the statute with some care, and are not able to assent to the view taken in Walker v. Sawyer.

The land owner has the right to detain lumber not removed before May 1, until the damages are paid. This right [250]*250is entirely distinct from any rights growing out of the right to take and convert the lumber to the use of the land owner, (for convenience spoken of as a forfeiture, though not technically such.) The mode of determining those damages, if the parties do not agree, is fixed by appraisal, b.ut the right to detain does not in any way depend upon it.

If such lumber, that is, lumber put into the river, carried by the water upon improved lands, and not taken away before the first of May, is not removed before the first of November, the land owner may convert it to his own use. This right is not, in terms, made to depend upon any appraisal of the damages, and we think no such dependence can be reasonably implied. The owner of the lumber is deprived by the statute of the right of removing his property after the first of May, without payment of the damages. They are, of course, from their nature uncertain, and unless some provision was made for their determination, the disagreement of the parties as to the amount, would render the prohibition to remove the property in effect perpetual. The appraisal was designed to obviate this difficulty. There is no connection between the fact of an appraisal and the forfeiture, except that mentioned in the last proviso alluded to, that the owner may remove the logs the succeeding winter or spring, if he has paid the damages and cost, which may be either those agreed by the parties, or those appraised by the selectmen.

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Related

Fairbanks v. Town of Antrim
2 N.H. 105 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1819)
Woodbury v. Thompson
3 N.H. 194 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1825)
Pike v. Jenkins
12 N.H. 255 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1841)
Walker v. Sawyer
13 N.H. 191 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1842)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.H. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wentworth-nhsuperct-1852.