185 Mass. 10 | Mass. | 1904
This is a bill in equity brought by the members of the metropolitan water board to obtain an injunction against the discharge by the defendant of human excrement
The statute (§ 24) authorizes the making of “ rules and regulations for the sanitary protection of all waters used by the metropolitan water board for the water supply of any city, town or water company,” etc. That the exercise of such authority by the Legislature is within the police power as it is generally defined by the courts, and within the particular provisions of c. 1, § 1, art. 4, of the Constitution of Massachusetts, is too plain for discussion. It may involve a regulation and modification of a use of streams which otherwise might be made under the common law rights of riparian proprietors. These rights include every reasonable kind of use of the water as it passes by, having a proper regard for the rights of other proprietors on the stream below. It has often been said that riparian proprietors have no right to pollute the waters of a stream. In thinly settled and remote regions, upon streams whose waters are not appropriated to domestic use, impurities may sometimes be discharged into
As the water flowing through the defendant’s premises is used as a part of the metropolitan water supply for numerous cities and towns, these rules and regulations control the exercise of the defendant’s ordinary rights as a riparian proprietor, and are binding upon him without any taking of his property or provision for compensation. Newton v. Joyce, 166 Mass. 83 and cases there cited.
The defendant contends and the plaintiffs deny that he has acquired by prescription a right to discharge these impurities into the stream. We need not decide the question thus raised, for if he has acquired by prescription a right of property in the stream which he would not otherwise have, this right to pollute the stream is taken away by the statute and the action of the board in taking the waters. For damages to his property he is entitled to compensation under § 12 of the act. Damages “ in property,” are given whether they are sustained by a taking of property “ or by the interference with the use of any water, or by any other act or thing done by said board under this act.”
The metropolitan water board, under date of February 23, 1898, took all the waters that flow through the defendant’s premises, “ for the purpose of diverting the same for the uses of said act at or near said line of taking, and not elsewhere.” The line of taking is on the stream at a considerable distance below the defendant’s premises. A copy of this taking was filed in the registry of deeds in accordance with the statute, and all the other requirements of the act affecting the legality of the taking were
As a riparian proprietor without other rights, the rules and regulations are binding upon him, and if he has a prescriptive right to pollute the water, they are still binding and must be enforced; for he is entitled to compensation for the loss of such a right.
Whether in the exercise of the police power for the preservation of the public health, the Legislature, without providing compensation, might forbid the pollution of water by one who has acquired a prescriptive right to pollute it as against other proprietors, we need not decide.
Decree for the plaintiffs.