58 A. 504 | N.H. | 1904
The defendants' charter authorizes them to enter upon and appropriate any pond not belonging to an aqueduct company, to secure it by fences or otherwise, and to make such excavations upon any land as may be necessary for obtaining and conducting *563 the water from the pond and for repairing the works: "provided, that if it shall be necessary to enter upon and appropriate any . . . ponds or land for the purpose aforesaid, or to raise or lower the level of the same, and the said corporation shall not be able to agree with the owners thereof for the damages that may be done by said corporation, . . . either party may apply to the supreme court . . . to have the same laid out and the damages determined," etc. Laws 1891, c. 158, s. 5. The record raises no question concerning the validity of the "laying out" of the land and easements taken by the defendants, nor does it definitely describe such land and easements. It states that the defendants without the plaintiff's leave entered upon his land, dug up the soil, erected a dam, flowed ten acres of the land by means of the dam, laid pipes, and appropriated the pond and the land flowed to the business of supplying water to the village of Suncook. The plaintiff by bringing this proceeding elected to treat the defendants as having acted under the authority of their charter, instead of as trespassers. The defendants make no objection to this course. It is assumed that the "laying out" includes the land and easements actually appropriated by the defendants to their uses, together with the right to enter, and repair and renew the structures and pipes, and manage them as may be necessary in the prosecution of the business.
The plaintiff is entitled to compensation for the land taken for the site of the dam, for the flowage caused by the dam, for the injury to adjoining land (if any), for the rights taken to lay and maintain pipes in the land, and for any other land or rights in land taken from him. As the case is understood, these are the damages referred to in the record as compensation for "trespass and flowage," and to which recovery was limited by the ruling. The plaintiff says that he is the owner of the pond itself, and is entitled to damages for the taking of it, in addition to the items above mentioned. This is the sole question for consideration.
At the December term, 1889, three cases were decided in which the character of natural, fresh-water ponds, as to being public or private waters, was considered: Concord Mfg. Co. v. Robertson,
According to this rule, the pond in the plaintiff's land is public water, and his absolute ownership in the land ceases at the water's edge, or at high-water mark. State v. Sunapee Dam Co.,
It does not appear from the record that the plaintiff's damages were assessed. Apparently, the trial was stopped when the ruling was made, in order that the question raised by the exception might be determined and that the assessment might be subsequently made in accordance with the decision. Consequently, the order is
Case discharged.
All concurred. *566