170 Mass. 509 | Mass. | 1898
This case comes here on a report from the Superior Court, and the first question is whether there is jurisdiction in equity of the suit. If the result of allowing the bill to be maintained would be to transfer to the equity side of the court the trial of the question whether the defendants were guilty of trespass, as alleged in the bill, and nothing more, then it is clear that, under Washburn v. Miller, 117 Mass. 376, the bill would have to be dismissed. But previous to the filing of the bill the plaintiff had brought an action at law, and in addition to this the bill alleges that the defendants on many occasions had trespassed on the plaintiff’s land, and threatened to continue such acts regardless of the plaintiff’s rights, and were insolvent, so that the plaintiff would be unable to collect from them such damages and costs as he might recover in actions at law. The master has found that the defendant John Gunn claims the right to enter on the plaintiff’s premises for the purpose of obtaining access to the great pond on which they lie in order to cut and carry away ice therefrom, that previous to the filing of the bill he had trespassed on the plaintiff’s premises under this alleged claim of right, and that he is unable to satisfy an execution for damages. It is plain that under such circumstances an action at law will not afford the plaintiff adequate relief, and we think that he is entitled to maintain his bill. The ground on which equity takes jurisdiction in such a case is the inadequacy of the relief afforded by a court of law, and the principle has been applied in numerous cases. Clark v. Flint, 22 Pick. 231, 238. Goodson v. Richardson, L. R. 9 Ch. 221. Smallman v. Onions, 3 Bro. Ch. R. 621. Wilson v. Hill, 1 Dick. 367. Winnipiseogee Lake Co. v. Worster, 29 N. H. 433. Hicks v. Compton, 18 Cal. 206. Cottle v. Harrold, 72 Ga. 830. Musselman v. Marquis, 1 Bush, (Ky.) 463. Stout v. Curry, 110 Ind. 514. Camp v. Bates, 11 Conn. 51.
The case is distinguishable from Washburn v. Miller, ubi supra.
The defendants contend that the roadway leading from the town way to the premises of the plaintiff across the railroad is a public way, and that they had the right to use it for the purpose of carting ice from the pond, as they were doing at the time of the trespass complained of. If it is not a public way, then the defendants contend that, inasmuch as the pond is a great pond, and cutting and carrying away ice have been recognized as a public use, they had the right under the ordinances of 1641 and 1649 to cross the unimproved land of the plaintiff for that purpose, although the defendant Gunn owned land bordering on the pond.
It is not contended that the public authorities ever laid out the roadway as a public way. The contention is that it has become such by dedication or prescription. The master has found “ that for more than one hundred years there has been a well known and well defined roadway extending from the town or public way across what is now the railroad location and railroad land over and along the narrow neck of land in controversy to the larger or main tract of land which with the narrow strip of land constitutes Union Point; that said roadway has been used and travelled by hunters, fishermen, picnic parties, celebrators on public occasions, and by whomsoever chose, without objection and without obstruction until 1890, when the plaintiff erected a barrier across said road, and prevented the defendant from entering thereon.” The master then stated that he did not find that this travel had been of a nature, or an extent, or under a claim of right, which would give the public an easement by prescription over said roadway as a public way. Though stated negatively, we think that this must be regarded as in effect a finding that the public had not acquired a right of way by prescription over the roadway. The defendants argue that this conclusion is inconsistent with what is found as to the nature and extent of the use. We do not think so. For aught that appears, the use which was made by fishermen and others of the roadway may have been with the permission, express or implied,
We come then to the remaining question, namely, whether under the ordinances of 1641 and 1649, and the construction which has been given to it, the defendants had a right to cross the plaintiff’s land for the purpose of cutting and carrying away ice from the pond without being deemed guilty of trespass.
Various questions have arisen and have been considered in regard to the rights of the public and of individuals in the great ponds, but the question whether the public may cross private lands, and if so to what extent, for the purpose of gaining access to them, does not seem to have been passed upon, though there are various dicta in our decisions in regard to it which tend to show that the right of access is limited to cases where it can be exercised without trespassing on the .lands of others. Coolidge v. Williams, 4 Mass. 140, 144. West Roxbury v. Stoddard, 7 Allen, 158, 171. Paine v. Woods, 108 Mass. 160, 173. Rowell v. Doyle, 131 Mass. 474.
The law relating to great ponds is peculiar to this Commonwealth and to Maine, which was formerly a part of this Commonwealth. The earliest reference to great ponds is found in the Body of Liberties, adopted in 1641 by the Massachusetts Bay
The effect of the provision which has been referred to in the Body of Liberties, and in the ordinance of 1649, was to reserve the great ponds for the public use. West Roxbury v. Stoddard,
The uses which the public might make of them were not limited to those named in the ordinance or in the Body of Liberties, or to such as could be made of them at that time. The ponds, like any other property, could be applied to such uses as from time to time they became capable of. Though fishing and fowling only were named, the mention of them did not exclude other uses, and the permission to householders never has been construed as a prohibition to those who were not householders. But, as already observed, the manner in which those who did not own any lands on the ponds could gain access to them never has been expressly considered. It is probable, as was said in West Roxbury v. Stoddard, ubi supra, “ that many and perhaps most of the large ponds have some common land, or a public way of some kind, lying upon or leading to the shore, by which the public have access to them.” But, in the absence of such common land or public way, unless provision was made whereby those desirous of doing so could obtain some access to the ponds without being deemed guilty of trespass, the public would or might be excluded in many cases from any benefit of the public reservation. At the time when the ordinances were adopted the territory to which they applied was almost wholly a wilderness. There naturally would be few public ways leading to great ponds. If there was any common land upon them it might be remote and inconvenient. The population was small and scattered. Many, if not most, of the ponds would be surrounded with wild lands. No harm would be done by permitting persons to cross these lands for the purpose of gaining access to the ponds for fishing and fowling, which were the uses for which they were principally resorted to. In view of all these circumstances, it was provided by the ordinance of 1649 that any man who desired to gain access to the ponds for these purposes should be free to “ pass and repass on foot through any man’s propriety for that end, so they trespass not upon any man’s corn or meadow.” This, we think, was intended to limit the passing and repassing to unimproved and unenclosed lands lying on the ponds, and is to be construed with reference to the con
We do not think that any light on the question now under examination can be obtained by considering the rights of the public in the land lying between high and low water mark in tidal waters. At common law, great ponds were unknown as such, and the ownership of land bounding on the sea extended only to ordinary high water mark. By the ordinance of 1649 private ownership was extended in the latter case to low water mark, when it did not exceed one hundred rods, subject to the right of passage over it and of fishing which the public had always had. We fail to see in this, or in the fact that great ponds were named in connection with “ bays, coves, and rivers ” where “ the sea ebbs and flows,” anything which tends to show that the right of passage on the part of the public over lands lying on great ponds is to be extended as the uses of the ponds increase, or is to be enlarged beyond what reasonably may be supposed to have been contemplated in view of the conditions existing at the time of the adoption of the ordinance.
The result is that the exceptions taken by the defendants to the master’s report must be overruled, and judgment must be entered for the plaintiff in the action at law, and a final decree entered in his favor in this suit embodying the terms of the injunction heretofore issued, in accordance with the terms of the judge’s report.
So ordered.