140 Mass. 508 | Mass. | 1886
This is an appeal, under the Pub. Sts. e. 188, § 12, from an order of the Superior Court rejecting an award made and returned into court, in pursuance of a submission, under that chapter, of the claims of the plaintiff against the defendant for damages done to the plaintiff’s estate on Broadway and Rockland Street, in the city of Fall River, by lowering the grade of Broadway, and injuring his shade trees thereon, and also for damages to the same estate by changing the grade of Rockland Street. For compensation on account of these injuries, the plaintiff had previously filed his several petitions for damages to the board of aldermen of said city, who had declined thereunder to make him any award, and the agreement for submission to arbitrators was thereafter made.
As the power of arbitrators thus selected to make an award upon which a judgment can be rendered depends wholly upon the statute, it is necessary to inquire whether the claims submitted are within the class of controversies which may properly form the subject of such a submission. The jurisdiction of the arbitrators is a special jurisdiction, created entirely by statute, and can be sustained only when the proceedings are within its provisions. Henderson v. Adams, 5 Cush. 610.
All controversies which may be “ the subject of a personal action at law, or of a suit in equity,” may be submitted to such an arbitration. The plaintiff contends that the proceeding by which he was entitled to assert his claim for damages when the city, exercising a lawful authority, changed the grade of the streets near his premises, might properly be termed a personal action at law. Personal actions are those which are brought for the recovery of a debt, or damages for breach of a contract, or for a specific personal chattel, or for satisfaction in damages because of some injury to the person or to personal or real property. 1 Chit. PL (16th Am. ed.) 142. They are divided by the statute
It was held in Henderson v. Adams, ubi supra, that a claim under the mill act for damages to land, occasioned by flowing it by a mill-dam, was not included within the phrase “ all controversies which might be the subject of a personal .action at law, or of a suit in equity,” used in the Rev. Sts. c. 114, and that it could not, therefore, be the subject of a submission to arbitration before a justice of the peace. This appears to be quite decisive of the case at bar. It is true that a jury under the mill act may regulate the height and character of the dam, the times when the dam shall be kept open, the annual or gross damages, &c., while the question before the arbitrators in the case before us was one of damages solely. But the decision in Henderson v. Adams is not placed upon any reason derived from the variety of duties which are imposed upon a jury proceeding under the mill act, but upon the simple ground that the damage sought for flowing land by a mill-dam could be recovered only in the mode provided by statute, and that a claim for it was not the subject of a suit at law or in equity, but of a particular statutory
Decree affirmed.