173 Mass. 495 | Mass. | 1899
It is admitted that the defendants, the board of harbor and land commissioners, intend to dredge flats belonging to the plaintiffs, and to remove from them a substantial
We think that it must be understood that at least the earth which is to be removed from the plaintiffs’ flats is to be taken. That is the natural meaning of the statement that it is to be removed, and besides, whether the earth is taken out to sea or used, as the contract for dredging contemplates, to fill other flats, we cannot assume that the plaintiffs will or can furnish a place for it. Apart from the appropriation of the earth, the change in the surface of the flats in such a way as to bring it permanently under water is a very appreciable diminution of the owner’s rights. It is true, that at present they have no right to fill or build upon the flats. But it is agreed to be probable that in a few years the growth of the city will require a change, and this probability may be taken into account in deciding whether the theoretic damage is one of those minima which the law does not take into account.
It would be open to argument at least that an owner might be stripped of his rights so far as to amount to a taking without any physical interference with his land. On the other hand, we assume that even the carrying away or bodily destruction of property might be of such small importance that it would be justified under the police power without compensation. We assume that one of the uses of the convenient phrase, police power, is to justify those small diminutions of property rights, which, although within the letter of constitutional protection, are necessarily incident to the free play of the machinery of government. It may be that the extent to which such diminutions are lawful without compensation is larger when the harm is inflicted only as incident to some general requirement of public welfare. But whether the last mentioned element enters into the problem or not, the question is one of degree, and sooner or later we reach a point at which the Constitution applies, and forbids physical appropriation and legal restrictions alike unless they are paid for.
It is argued for the respondents, that, irrespective of the police power, the Commonwealth, as trustee of the jus publicum by force of the ordinance of 1647, may do what the Legislature has purported to authorize, under its property rights, so that in strictness no interference with the rights of the plaintiffs is threatened, as thus far we have assumed. To this 'it is enough to say that, if what is proposed to be done cannot be justified under the police power over the subject matter, taking the position of the Commonwealth into account, it stands less well as an act of ownership alone. The right to submerge the plaintiffs’ flats and to carry off their soil is less readily justified by any right reserved by the Commonwealth as grantor than by its power as sovereign to exact relatively small sacrifices from individuals for the common good. Weaver v. Mississippi & Rum River Boom Co. 28 Minn. 534, 537. Cases like Sage v. New York, 154 N. Y. 61, throw no light upon this question, because there the plaintiff had no title to the flats, but only such riparian rights as were recognized in Rumsey v. New York & New England Railroad, 133 N. Y. 79. See Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1, 19, 21.
If the plaintiffs’ property must be paid for, the question remains whether Sufficient provision is made for payment. There has been no taking of flats or rights in the manner provided for in St. 1897, c. 486. By § 4 of the act of 1898, “ Any person