32 A. 757 | N.H. | 1891
Since the bill was amended by joining the attorney-general as a plaintiff, the legislature has granted the defendants a revocable license (of which judicial notice may be taken —
SECTION 1. The passway that has been built between Liberty island in Lake Sunapee and the mainland may be maintained and renewed by any owner or lessee of any part of said island, subject to such regulations and restrictions as may be imposed in any legal proceedings brought or to be brought by public authority for the protection and maintenance of public rights.
SECT. 2. The license given by the first section of this act for the maintenance and renewal of said passway may at any time be changed by an amendment, and wholly revoked by a repeal of this act, and no private right shall be acquired under it by lapse of time.
SECT. 3. This act shall not impair any private right, whether involved in any pending suit or not.
SECT. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
The attorney-general being but the representative and agent of the state, the effect of the act was to remove the only ground upon which he could ask for an injunction to demolish and remove the passway as a public nuisance, and he has accordingly withdrawn as plaintiff from the pending suit. This leaves Dana the sole plaintiff, and the bill thus becomes a private bill to abate and restrain a public nuisance, to the maintenance of which the public consent has been duly obtained. The public therefore must be regarded as not injured by the defendants' acts, and when the question of regulations and restrictions is settled, it does not appear that there will be any ground on which an action by the plaintiff can be maintained. Certainly the essential elements which are requisite successfully to invoke the aid of equity by way of injunction are wanting. No case of strong and clear injustice is shown, nor is there any ground to apprehend that loss of health, loss of trade or business, destruction of the means of subsistence, or permanent ruin to property, may or will ensue to the plaintiff from the defendants' acts. No substantial, serious, and irreparable damage appears. For the subjection of her land to the easement of a highway, she has, after a full hearing in which she participated, been awarded the sum of one dollar; and no appeal has been taken from the award. This strongly indicates a theoretical injury merely to her land; and such an injury does not furnish ground for interposition by injunction. Bassett v. Salisbury Co.,
But aside from the failure to appeal, it is conclusively to be presumed that the damages awarded the plaintiff were full compensation for all the injury resulting to her estate from the construction and use of the road. Any damage to which she might be entitled by diminution of the value of her right to build a wharf at that point, was necessarily included in the damages awarded for the diminution of her whole estate of which the right to build a wharf was a part. This right did not nullify the statute, which authorized a road that would give the public access to the public water. If she had built a wharf there after the road was laid out, she would not have discontinued the highway, nor cut off the right of access to the water which was judicially established by the laying out of the road. By building the wharf she would have extended the road to the water line which the wharf had pushed further into the lake. People v. Lambier, 5 Den. 9, 15, 17; Conn. River Lumber Co. v. Olcott Falls Co.,
For good reasons, a deed bounding by fixed monuments on the bank of a fresh water river carries the boundary to the middle of the stream. Kent v. Taylor,
The statute of 1891, adopting the existing state of things, authorizes the extension of the road through the lake to Liberty island. This extension furnishes a means of access not only to the island, but to the deepest water on that route between the island and the mainland. The passway is a wharf as well as a road. If the plaintiff, as one of the public, desires any regulations or restrictions imposed on the passway that will reasonably secure her enjoyment of the public right of navigating the lake, she can be heard at the trial term "in any legal proceedings brought or to be brought by public authority for the protection and maintenance of public rights."
Whether the highway is a legal one or otherwise, is not a question for consideration in this proceeding. The commissioners had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and the laying out by them was a judgment which cannot be collaterally attacked. Horne v. Rochester,
"But there is no method," say counsel, of "taking advantage of the wrong directly by any judicial proceeding," and so "it is open to attack collaterally anywhere wherever the question arises." This contention obviously overlooks the decision in Boody v. Watson,
If the attorney-general desires to obtain an imposition of regulations or restrictions upon the maintenance or renewal of the passway for the protection of the public rights, or if the plaintiff so *598 desires, and obtains the requisite authority, a trial may be had at the trial term to determine what, if any, restrictions should be imposed; otherwise the bill will be dismissed.
Case discharged.
DOE, C. J., did not sit: the others concurred.