58 Conn. 91 | Conn. | 1889
The plaintiffs are the owners in fee of a tract of land in the town of New Haven which they have
The Superior Court for New Haven County, upon due hearing after notice, found that a cemetery located on the land of the plaintiffs would be of public convenience and necessity and that it would not be detrimental to public health. And upon a further hearing had on the motion of the present appellant that court found that the necessity extended to the particular piece of land owned by the plaintiffs.
Burton Dickerman, a citizen of New Haven, and the owner of certain lands near to the land of the plaintiffs, containing from five to seven acres, which he uses as an artificial ice pond, appeared in the Superior Court and was fully heard in opposition to the application of the plaintiffs. He now appeals to this court. There are nine reasons of appeal. The substance of all of them is contained in the fourth, that “ the court erred in overruling this appellant’s claim, that in order to constitute a public necessity there must be a public use, and that for this it was requisite that all persons have the same measure of right for the same measure of money.”
In order to understand clearly this reason of appeal it may be well to recur to the claim made by the counsel for Mr.
It is not very strongly claim ed before this court but that the finding of the Superior Court, so far as it determines that the cemetery so proposed to be located will not be detrimental to the public health, is conclusive and cannot be
The appellant says the proposed cemetery is not and cannot be of common convenience and necessity, for the reason that all persons cannot for the same measure of money have the same measure of right to be buried therein, and cites as supporting this claim language found in the case of The Evergreen Cemetery Association v. Beecher, 53 Conn., 551. The words cited, when examined in the connection in which they are used in that case, do not support the appellant’s argument. That was a complaint asking to take the lands of the defendant by the power of eminent domain for the purposes of a cemetery. There was a demurrer to the complaint and the question was reserved for the advice of the Court of Errors. In discussing the sufficiency of the complaint the judgfe who gave the opinion, after mentioning several kinds of public uses, and that although the use might be such that some persons would be excluded because of their inability to pay for it, said—“ nevertheless it remains a public use so long as all persons have the same measure of right for the same measure of money,” and then decided that the complaint in that case was insufficient because there was in it no averment that the land proposed to be taken was for the public use in the sense indicated. The expression used was an exceedingly happy one for the purpose then in hand. It was put forth as an illustration of what might be a public use rather than as an exhaustive definition of what all public uses must be.
If however it be admitted that the language used in that case should have the meaning put upon it by the appellant, yet his position is not much improved. The claim itself is so much wider than the finding of the court that it has no very firm basis of fact to rest upon. The plaintiff's, to be sure, are persons connected with the Catholic churches in New Haven, and while it is not claimed that they have been actuated by any other motive than a desire to provide burial
There is nothing to which the human mind clings with more tenacity than to its religious beliefs, and there is nothing which men resent with more fiery zeal than any interference with such beliefs. In ascertaining whether or not any proposed use of property will be of common convenience and necessity it might be sometimes unavoidable, and perhaps it would be at all times allowable, to take into consideration these beliefs prevalent in the community where the use is to be had, in the same way that the wealth, the populousness, the course of business, the trade and the pleasures of the community are considered.
In the early history of Connecticut the ecclesiastical society and the town were one. Then, and afterwards when the towns came to be divided into more than one ecclesiastical society, the same body that built the meeting house and settled the minister provided the burying ground and gave it such care as it had—often enough too little. The rude forefathers of every Connecticut hamlet have been “each in his narrow cell forever laid ” in an ecclesiastical burying ground, attended by some denominational minister to say a last prayer at his uncovered grave.
In 1821 the legislature erected ecclesiastical societies into school societies and gave school societies power to provide burial grounds, a hearse, etc. Cemetery associations were not provided for by statute till 1841.
The plaintiffs are the private owners of certain land which they seek to use for a private cemetery. But all property of every person is holden subject to the right of the legislature to pass any laws affecting its enjoyment which tend to protect the lives or the health of the citizens, or to promote good order or the public morals. The statute above quoted is an exercise of this right by the legislature, and was passed evidently with a view to the public health. The proximity of a cemetery to a reservoir from which the inhabitants of a city procured their drinking-water would be likely to produce disease; and for that reason the legislature might pro
Apart from considerations of health it is just as lawful for the owner of land to bury his dead in his own soil as it is for him to sow wheat therein or to set out a rose bush. What the owner may do himself he may permit others to do, and upon such terms or under such restrictions as he may choose to impose. He may grant or refuse permission to bury the dead in his field upon precisely the same terms or upon the same sort of conditions that he may grant or refuse permission to sow wheat or plant roses there. And in either case, if he limits his permission to those only who agree with him in denominational beliefs, he violates no law.
We are brought then to this result—that if the statute is to bear the construction which the appellant puts upon it, it becomes an arbitrary command to the plaintiffs not to use their land for a private cemetery while permitting the same land to be used for a public one; thus depriving the plaintiffs of a lawful private use of their own land without compensation and without reason. We think, as no land is taken for public use, that part of the statute must be regarded as satisfied by a use so far public as this one is.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.