129 Mass. 580 | Mass. | 1880
At the trial, no question was made of the propriety of any ruling except one upon the provisions of the Gen. Sts. c. 78, § 5. The presiding judge ruled that any acts done in violation of that statute were prima facie wrongful; and the only objection made by the defendant to the ruling is that the statute is unconstitutional, for the reason that it is not competent for the Legislature of the Commonwealth to pass any law upon that subject, it being within the exclusive jurisdiction of Congress in the exercise of its power “ to regulate commerce among the several States.”
The chapter, of which the section in controversy forms a part, contains six sections, and the title is “Of timber afloat or cast on shore.” The other five sections of the chapter guard very strictly the rights of property in logs, masts, spars and other timber which is properly floating in the river; and interference with such property is prohibited under highly penal provisions. The statute does not profess to take from the character of the Connecticut River that of a great highway, and it is not necessary to consider whether strictly that river is or is not technically “navigable waters.” The tide does not ebb and flow therein within the limits of this Commonwealth, and dams and bridges by authority of the Legislature of Massachusetts have been erected over and across it in various places.
It is not, in our view, necessary to discuss the relative rights of Congress and the Legislatures of the several States to pass laws affecting interstate commerce. Ho question upon that subject can be raised upon the facts in this case, nor can any such question be raised under this provision of law.
When there is such a state of facts, or there are such provisions of law, as to raise the question of such relative rights, a discussion of the subject is always interesting, nor is it wholly free from difficulty; and, if we confine ourselves to the words used by different judges, there is undoubtedly an apparent conflict in adjudicated cases. It is not important to consider in this case how far such conflict is real, or only apparent. There
The. defendant, however, relies with much confidence upon the decision by the Supreme Court of Maine in the case of Treat v. Lord, 42 Maine, 552. It is contended that, by the decision in that case, the right of every person to float logs upon navigable waters is absolute, and the power to regulate it is alone in Congress. No such principle is embraced within that decision. Upon the other hand, the right of the State to legislate upon the subject is upheld as absolute, even to the extent of deciding that the use of such stream may be absolutely forbidden by the Legislature. The plaintiff in that case contended that, by a grant of five thousand acres of land made by the Legislature of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, on February 7, 1820, he became possessed of the exclusive right to the use of the stream,
Heither of these propositions, nor any other decided in that case, has the slightest bearing upon any question involved in the
The case of Carter v. Thurston, 58 N. H. 104, is no more favorable to the claim of the defendant. In that case it was decided only that any person had the right to make a reasonable use of a public stream; that in such use he was not responsible for any damage done without his fault, that is, that the use itself is not a wrong-doing; but that he is responsible for injury done by his carelessness.
•There is no ground for the inference that, in the use of the river as a highway, the Legislature may not make suitable regulations for its more convenient and safe use by persons having equal rights thereon, or that a use in violation of such regulation is authorized under the Constitution of the United States, and cannot be limited by State legislation because such regulation is an interference with interstate commerce.
Exceptions overruled.