The petition alleges that the petitioner is the owner in trust of a certain mill property on the Winooski river, and that he desires to raise to the height of fifty feet a dam now existing on said property, and proposes to use the
It is provided in chapter 159 of the Vermont Statutes that one who desires to set up or continue a mill or manufactory on his land, and to erect or continue or raise a dam to obtain water therefor, and thereby flow the lands of another person, may secure the right to do so in the manner there provided, if commissioners appointed for that purpose, or the Court itself, shall find “that the flowing of the land as proposed will be of public benefit.” For the purposes of this- discussion, it will be assumed, without consideration, that a plant for the generation of electricity, is a manufactory within the meaning of the statute.
The first question for consideration, as stated by the petitioner, is whether the application of water-power to the generation of electricity for use in the operation of a railroad is such a public benefit as will justify an exercise of the right of eminent domain under the provisions of this chapter. But this statement of the inquiry is hardly broad enough for our purpose; for this assumes that the statute names a constitutional ground of condemnation, and proposes to test the peti
The argument of the petitioner is an earnest plea for a liberal construction of the term “public use.” It is evidently considered that the term “public benefit” is a better expression of what is meant, and cases are cited where it is said that “public use” is synonymous with that term. We are also referred to the utterance of this Court in Re Barre Water Company,
We have in the petitioner’s brief an extended presentation of the views expressed by other Courts in dealing with the question of public use. In considering these opinions, it must be remembered that some States have constitutional provisions much broader than ours, and that even a slight variation of expression may be influential in determining the line of decision. It is true, nevertheless, that some of the cases cited proceed upon grounds that afford support to the petitioner’s contention. In fact, the reasoning of some of them comes dangerously near the argument that it is for the public benefit to have property of this character in the hands of those who will put
Our only decision upon the flowage law is found in Tyler v. Beacher,
But it is said that the purpose of this condemnation is to provide motive power for a railroad, and that the railroad is unquestionably a public servant. Treating the case as if the application were by the railroad company itself, the reasoning of this Court in Eldridge v. Smith,
We have thus far considered the statute upon the theory that it was designed to give the right of eminent domain to every riparian owner for the maintenance of a mill or manu-factory of public benefit. This was the view formerly taken of the mill act of Massachusetts; but the more recent doctrine of that State is that the provision is not an exercise of the right of eminent domain, but a statutory regulation of rights common to the riparian owners. It is insisted that the petition can be sustained on this ground.
The doctrine referred to is claimed to be analogous to that upon which provision is made for the partition of land held by several tenants in common. The different owners of the bed and banks of the stream' are treated as having a common interest in -the reasonable use of the flowing water. It is said that one reasonable use of the water is the use of the power inherent in the fall of the stream, that this power cannot be used without damming the water and causing it to flow back, and that one man may owin the fall, and another the land which it is necessary to flow. The Courts of Massachusetts hold that the Legislature may secure the full value of the stream to the different owners by combining these two inter
We cannot adopt this view. It seems to assume that the land goes with the stream., instead of the stream with the land, and to give the riparian owners a joint interest in the land because of their peculiar rights to the water. But the owners of the various properties are the several and independent owners of their respective parcels of land, and their only right to the water is such as this, ownership gives them. To say that one’s holding of the land is subservient to such use as the lower owner may desire to make of the water, is to reverse all our theories regarding the use of streams. It is true that in Johns v. Stevens,
It should be noticed, also, that the argjument advanced in support of the statute as thus classified is not coextensive with the right given. The argument is based upon the existence of a common interest in. the stream, while the statute applies to all flowable lands. A dam of mod
Judgment affirmed.
