139 Mass. 389 | Mass. | 1885
The St. of 1867, c. 106, authorized the city of Worcester to fix the boundaries of several brooks named therein, one of which is Mill Brook, a natural stream emptying into the Blackstone River, and to “alter, change, widen, straighten, and deepen the channels of said brooks and remove obstructions therefrom, and .... use and appropriate said brooks, cover them, pave and enclose them in retaining walls, so far as they shall adjudge necessary for purposes of sewerage, drainage, and the public health.”
The bill alleges that the city, acting under this statute, has changed, widened, and deepened the channel of Mill Brook, and now uses it for the purpose of the sewerage and drainage of the city, having constructed a great number of sewers and drains emptying into it; that the whole sewage of the city is discharged into it, and through it into the Blackstone River; that a nuisance is thereby created, by which the plaintiff, who is the owner of a mill site on the Blackstone River, is greatly injured ; that the city could and should have so constructed said sewers and drains, and should have so properly purified the sewage passing through them, as not to create a nuisance; and that it “ carelessly, negligently, aiid unnecessarily so constructed said sewers and drains, and carelessly, negligently, and unnecessarily so discharged the waters therefrom, and so negligently omitted to take reasonable and proper precautions and methods in the construction of said sewers and drains and purification of said waters,” that the nuisance complained of is created. The defendant demurs to the bill; and therefore, for the purposes of this hearing, we must take all the facts alleged to be true.
The case of Washburn & Moen Manuf. Co. v. Worcester, 116 Mass. 458, was a suit in equity, like the case before us¿ The demurrer to the bill was sustained, the court saying that “ the bill does not allege any negligence of the city, either in the manner in which the sewage was discharged from the mouth of the sewer, or in omitting to take proper precautions to purify it.” In that case, the court state as a general principle, speaking of the construction of sewers, that, “if by an excess of the powers granted, or negligence in the mode of carrying out the system legally adopted, or in omitting to take due precautions to guard against consequences of its operation, a nuisance is created, the city may be liable to indictment in behalf of the public, or to suit by individuals suffering special damage,” though it was not necessary to decide how far this principle was applicable to the case then before the court.
When the Legislature authorizes a city or town to construct sewers, or to use a natural stream as a sewer, it is not to be assumed that it intends to authorize the city or town so to construct its sewers, or so to use the stream, as to create a nuisance, unless this is the necessary result of the powers granted. On the contrary, if it is practicable to do the work authorized without creating a nuisance, it is to be presumed that the
The English cases we have cited were decided under statutes differing from ours, but they are instructive for their statements and discussion of the general principles applying in such cases, irrespective of the particular provisions of the statutes. They all concur in spirit and substance with the statement made by Lord Chancellor Hatherley in the case last cited: “When any person finds that the Legislature has authorized a work to be done (and, of course, the force of this is increased by the view we have taken, that the true construction of the act is, that it is to be done without creating a nuisance), he is not to assume it will create a nuisance. On the contrary, the presumption would be that the board would not do anything unlawful. It is lawful for them to make the sewers, it is lawful for them to conduct the sewage into the river, but they are to do it in such a way as not to create a nuisance.”
In the case at bar, the Legislature authorized the city of Worcester to use Mill Brook as a sewer; by necessary implication, the statute authorized it to empty its sewage into Blackstone River; but we cannot presume that it was the intention of the Legislature to exempt the city from the obligation to use due care in the construction and management of its works, so as not to cause any unnecessarily injurious consequences to the rights of others. If it is practicable to use any methods of constructing the sewer, and, as a part of the construction, of purifying the sewage at its mouth, at an expense which is reasonable, having regard to the nature of the work and the magnitude and importance of the interests involved, it is the duty of the city to adopt such methods.
The case comes before us in such a form that we can do no more than state the general principles which must govern the hearing. The bill alleges negligence in constructing the sewer,
This is all that is necessary for the decision of this case. But, to prevent misunderstanding, we add, that, if the only mode of preventing the pollution of the river is found to be by the adoption of an extensive system of purification, independent of the construction of the sewer, requiring the taking of large tracts of land, we must not be understood as implying that it is within the duty or the power of the defendant to do this.
The power to convert the brook into a sewer carries by implication the power to expend money for any plan of work which is an incident or part of the main work authorized by the statute, but it would seem that the statute does not give the defendant power to take lands or expend money for an independent system of sewage purification. If such system is rendered necessary by the construction of the sewer, the remedy must be sought from the Legislature, which can best adjust and settle the conflicting rights and interests of the public and of the riparian owners upon the river.
The bill further alleges, as an independent ground of relief, that the defendant has, within six years past, changed the outlet or mouth of Mill Brook so that it empties into the river at a