131 Mass. 207 | Mass. | 1881
This case was submitted to us upon briefs, and the nature of some of the questions presented by the defendant’s counsel leads us to doubt whether he has not failed to raise the questions he desired.
The action is against the defendant for tearing away the plaintiffs’ dam, erected by them for the purpose of flowing their cranberry meadow. The plaintiffs contended that one end of
The claim of the defendant is, that, because it was agreed that some time between two and three centuries ago the town of
There were ten other requests for instruction, none of which was given in the terms in which requested. General instructions were given, which the presiding judge intended as all that were appropriate to the case, and as including all embraced within the defendant’s requests to which the defendant was entitled. The stream upon which the plaintiffs’ dam was erected was not navigable, and the dam was erected under the provisions of the St. of 1866, e. 206. The stream was one up which alewives were accustomed to pass in the spring to cast their spawn. The defendant was one of the fish committee of the town of Yarmouth, and the subject matter of the controversy between the parties was whether the flowing of the cranberry meadows for the protection of the cranberry crop was destructive of or injurious to the alewife fishery; and if so, whether it gave the right to the defendant to tear down the dam at the time and in the manner he did.
The defendant contended that the plaintiff should have made his meadow practically level, and, being made so level, he contended that it was not necessary for the protection of the cranberry culture that the dam should be any higher than sufficient barely to cover the meadow with water, and that it should not be raised to such a height as that the fish would go upon the meadow at all to cast their spawn; that they would avoid water less than six inches deep, and would not cast their spawn upon a meadow if no more covered with water than was necessary for the cranberry culture; and that, as it was usual to let the water off of cranberry meadows before the spawning season was wholly over, there was danger of the destruction of the spawn if the water was raised so high as to induce the fish to deposit their
The Legislature has seen fit to give to the owners of cranberry meadows the same rights to erect dams and flow their meadows that had been long enjoyed by owners of mill sites. It is undoubtedly within the power of the Legislature to authorize such a use of a stream as shall wholly destroy a public fishery ; and it is probably matter of common knowledge that the Legislature
The instructions asked for, in addition to the one already stated, were as follows: “ 1. The plaintiffs cannot recover in this action for damages resulting from a frost or ravages by worms that did not occur until after the bringing of this action. Nor, under their declaration, for such damages whenever they happened. 2. If the plaintiffs could have so constructed their dam or cranberry bog as that their use of the water would not interfere with or injure the public fishery under the charge of the fish committee of the towns of Yarmouth and Dennis, they were bound so to do; and, if they did not, said committee had the right to reduce the plaintiffs’ dam to the point necessary to avoid such interference with or injury to said fishery. 3.' If the plaintiffs’ dam was constructed upon the land belonging to the town of Yarmouth without permission from said town, or if, without such permission, said dam or its abutments were built against, or so as to be supported by, a town bridge forming a part of a highway, or if, without such permission, the plaintiffs’ fishway was constructed on said town’s land or under its bridge, the defendant had the right to remove said dam or fishway interfering with or causing damage to a public fishery existing in the stream across which said dam was built. 4. If the plaintiffs by their dam so raised the waters of the stream leading from the pond as to cause the fish to spawn in such places about the shores of the pond, as that, when the plaintiffs let the water off, the spawn would be destroyed to an extent that would practically destroy a public fishery existing in the stream, the defendant would have the right to reduce the height
The bill of exceptions then recites that “ The court declined to instruct the jury in the language of the foregoing requests of the defendant, but, having explained the provisions of law respecting fisheries and the erection of dams across non-navigable streams by the owners of land appropriated to the cultivation of cranberries, the court did instruct the jury that it was the duty of the plaintiffs in this case, not only to build and maintain suitable fishways in connection with their dam, but that it was also their duty to use reasonable care, skill and prudence in building and maintaining their dam, in the preparation, by way of grading or otherwise, of their land before it
The jury were also instructed “ that the plaintiffs had no right to build their dam in the public highway, either with or without the consent of the town, nor would they have the right to build their dam on land of the town without its consent; and that if the dam was built within the limits of the highway or on land of the town without its consent, the defendant, acting as the authorized agent of the town, would have a right to remove the dam, and would not be liable therefor to the plaintiffs in this action; and that if any part of the plaintiffs’ dam was in the highway or on land of the town without its consent, the defendant would in like manner have a right to remove the part of the dam so standing in the highway or on the town’s land. But that if the plaintiffs built one end or part of their dam on Whelden’s land with his consent, though there was no other evidence of a lease from Whelden to the plaintiffs, that would not authorize the jury to find that the dam was wrongfully constructed, or that the defendant for that reason had a right to remove it.”
Upon this state of the evidence the court instructed the jury “that they could not regard the injury caused by the frost and insects after May 9, the date of the plaintiffs’ writ, as distinct and independent grounds of damage, but that the true rule of damage in this case, if the jury should find for the plaintiffs, would be to determine, in view of all the evidence in the case, how much less the value of the plaintiffs’ land for cranberry culture was, for the year 1878, by reason of the dam having been removed by the defendant at the time he made the removal, than it would have been if the dam had not been removed and the water had been drawn off by the plaintiffs at the proper time and in the proper manner, as stated in the former part of these instructions to the jury.”
These instructions were adapted to the evidence in the case, and were sufficient. Gould v. Boston Duck Co. 13 Gray, 442. Newhall v. Ireson, 8 Cush. 595. Elliot v. Fitchburg Railroad, 10 Cush. 191. Hinckley v. Nickerson, 117 Mass. 213.
The defendant certainly has no ground of complaint. Upon an examination of the pleadings, it is quite evident that the parties tried their cause upon what either of them deemed essential to the merits of the controversy, without special reference to the issues raised by the pleadings; and the matter most strenuously contested by the defendant, to wit, the danger of injury to the spawn of the fish by reason of the possibility of the water being drawn off too early, is not raised by the
Memorandum.
On the eleventh day of April 1881, the Honorable Augustus L. Soule resigned the office of justice of this court, which he had held since the twenty-seventh day of March 1877.
Or the eighteenth day of April 1881, the Honorable Charles Devers, late Attorney General of the United States, was appointed a justice of this court, in place of Mr. Justice Soule resigned, and took his seat on the bench on the nineteenth day of the same month, at the term of the court then held at Lowell in the county of Middlesex.