148 Mass. 605 | Mass. | 1889
The record of the taking of water by the town of Weymouth, after reciting the authority given to the town by the statute to take for the purpose set forth in the statute the waters of Weymouth Great Pond, and the waters which flowed into and from the same, and any water rights connected therewith, states that the town duly proceeded to take and hold for the sole use of the town all the waters of the pond, with the land under the same, and all 'the waters in all the streams that flowed into or from the pond, for the purpose of supplying the town and its inhabitants with pure water, to extinguish fires, gen-
But in the case at bar the town expressly exercised the right given to it by the Legislature, and took all the waters of the pond for the public use. Evidence that all the water was not needed, and would not be used for the purposes for which it was taken, would be incompetent to show, either that the taking was illegal, or that all the water was not taken. The taking of the water did not consist in the actual diversion of the water, but in the acquisition of the right to divert it. By the taking, the town acquired the right to divert all the water from the petitioners’ mills, and the petitioners were deprived of all right to the use of it. The damagés occasioned by the taking are estimated as of the time of the taking, and are occasioned by the quantity of water the right to divert which is taken, irrespective of the amount actually diverted. Ipswich Mills v. County Commissioners, 108 Mass. 363. Bailey v. Woburn, 126 Mass. 416. Ætna Mills v. Waltham, 126 Mass. 422. Cowdrey v. Woburn, 136 Mass. 409. Smith v. Concord, 143 Mass. 253.
To show the quantity of water which would be actually diverted from the petitioners’ mills, the court admitted evidence, offered by the respondent, of the population of Weymouth, and of the ratio of its increase in the past, and of the quantity of water that the town had diverted for its use during the year before the trial, and of the average quantity to each inhabitant used in several cities, and estimates from these data as to what the future consumption of the water would be by the inhabitants of Weymouth. The argument for the competency of the
Without deciding that these considerations alone would show the evidence to be inadmissible, the vital objection to it is, that the facts which it was offered to prove tend only to show the probability that the town will not exercise in full the right it has taken. • The taking is for the purpose of fixing the rights of the parties, including the right of the mill-owner to damages. If the taking had been of so much of the water of the pond as should from time to time be actually used by the inhabitants of the town, it would have been too indefinite. It would be more objectionable if, upon a definite taking of all or of a part of the water, the respondent could show, in reduction of damages, that it is probable that it will use a part only of what it took. However much the belief in the probability that a right taken by eminent domain will not be exercised may affect the market value of related property, the party taking cannot prove the probability that he will not exercise his right as an element in the market value of the property, or in mitigation of damages occasioned to it by the taking. Brown v. Worcester, 13 Gray, 31. Old Colony Railroad v. Miller, 125 Mass. 1.
If a parcel of land should be cut off by a railroad, the -fact that the railroad company had prepared a crossing over its road for access to such parcel, and intended to maintain it, or the probability that a highway would be laid out over the railroad which would give access to the land, might affect the market value of the land cut off, but could not be put in evidence by
Some other exceptions were taken by the petitioners to the admission or exclusion of evidence, which we have considered, but do not think it necessary to discuss in detail. We do not find any error except in the admission of evidence to prove the probable future consumption of water by the inhabitants of Weymouth. Exceptions sustained.