47 Me. 88 | Me. | 1860
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The specifications were amended by leave of the Court; and the determination of the presiding Judge on this matter was final, and not subject to exception.
It was decided in Hill v. Baker, 28 Maine, 9, that all the owners of the mill-dam complained of should be joined in the process to obtain damages occasioned by the flowage of land. It was also decided in Tucker v. Campbell, 36 Maine, 346, that all the co-tenants of the land specified in the complaint as injured by flowing, must join as plaintiffs or complainants.
In this case, the defendants plead that they are not owners or occupants, and, in their brief statement, allege that there are other owners and occupants, not named in the complaint. The brief statement also gives the names of the other own
If this were an action at common law, it is clear that the objection, even if taken by plea in abatement, would not avail. 28 Maine, 9, before cited. But the process is not an action at law. It is sui generis, in its nature, partaking of some of the elements of a- suit at law, but resembling much more a process in equity. It is not commenced by writ, but by a bill of complaint. The judgment is not, as in a case at law, for damages actually sustained at the date of the process, but it fixes, in addition to such damages, the yearly damages thereafter ; the height of the dam; the time allowed in which to flow; and there is also a provision for future proceedings to increase or diminish the damages.
In the case of Hill v. Baker, before cited, the Court takes this view of the nature of the process, and says, that it is not as tort feasors that the defendants are complained of, but that “ the process is rather in the nature of a.bill in equity to obtain redress for the injury occasioned by the flowing, and to obtain that which is, in effect, an injunction against an unreasonable exercise of the right of flowage.”
Viewed in this light, the strict rules of pleading, applicable to suits at law commenced by writs, cannot apply; but the rules in cases in equity do apply. When, in such cases, it appears that other persons, not named, should be parties to the bill, they may be summoned in, and proper amendments may be made.
In this case, we think that the other owners should be join-' ed as respondents, but that the process should not abate, but leave should be granted to summon in the other owners named, and to amend the complaint accordingly. As the defendant did not specify this objection, as to non-joinder, in his original specifications, the amendment is to be without terms as to costs. The■ case to stand for trial.