211 Mass. 10 | Mass. | 1912
This is a petition to the Superior Court under St. 1906, c. 356, § 1, amending R. L. c. 91, § 8, in the nature of an appeal from an order of the commissioners on fisheries and game prohibiting the petitioner from discharging sawdust from a mill owned by him into the stream on which it is situated in the town of Becket, and from accumulating sawdust on the bank thereof so that it will be liable to fall or be swept into the stream, and requiring him to erect a blower or to take other measures to prevent the discharge of sawdust from the mill into the stream. The case was heard by the Chief Justice of the Superior Court, who took a view and made a report of his findings, and affirmed the order of the respondents. The petitioner requested certain rulings which weré refused, and the case is here on exceptions taken by him to the refusal of the Chief Justice to rule as requested.
The statute provides that "... If the commissioners determine that the fish of any brook or stream in this Commonwealth are of sufficient value to warrant the prohibition or regulation of the discharge therein of sawdust from sawmills, and that the discharge of sawdust from any particular sawmill materially injures such fish, they may, by an order in writing to the owner or tenant of such sawmill, prohibit or regulate the discharge of sawdust therefrom into such brook or stream.” St. 1906, c. 356, § 1.
The petitioner contends that by the words “of sufficient value” is meant “of sufficient commercial value,” or of sufficient value to justify devoting the stream to fishing instead of to industry. But we think that there is nothing in the statute which warrants or requires such a construction or which shows that that is what the Legislature meant by the words “of sufficient value.” It rarely, if ever, would happen that “the fish,” or “the fisheries,” as the statute as amended by St. 1910, c. 460, now reads, “of any brook or stream” would be of sufficient value commercially to warrant devoting the brook or stream to them to the exclusion of industrial
There is nothing in the statute under consideration to show that the Legislature intended to depart from the policy which it had theretofore pursued, and we think that by the words “of sufficient value” is meant of value sufficient to make the? preservation and multiplication of the fish in the brook or stream worth while taking all the circumstances into account, the kind of fish, for instance, their number, the suitableness of the stream for propagating and preserving them, its location and the opportunities afforded by it for enjoyment, the benefit that would result, and the nature of such rules and regulations as would have to be established and their effect upon such industries, if any, as there are upon the banks of the stream. In other words, the question is whether, taking all things into consideration, it is worth while to attempt to save the fish or not. Amongst the considerations which may properly be taken into account is the rest, recreation and enjoyment that will be afforded to such of the public as may desire to resort to the stream for the purpose of angling. In laying out a way selectmen have a right to take into account the fact that pleasure travel will be accommodated as well as business travel. Higginson v. Nahant, 11 Allen, 530. There was no error, therefore, on the part of the Chief Justice in ruling as he did, in effect, that such considerations could properly be taken into account in determining whether the fish were of sufficient value to warrant the prohibition of the discharge of sawdust into the stream from the petitioner’s mill. There is nothing inconsistent with the conclusion here reached in Commonwealth v. Boston Advertising Co. 188 Mass. 348.
The petitioner also contends that the order constituted in substance and effect a taking of his property without compensation, and was therefore in violation of the Constitution of the United States and of this Commonwealth. There is no doubt that the
The petitioner still further contends that the selection of sawmills from all other industries
The result is that the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.-
See now St. 1910, c. 460.