133 A. 352 | Vt. | 1926
Assuming to act under the authority conferred by Chapter 271 of the General Laws, the State Board of Health made and promulgated an order prohibiting boating on Berlin Pond, which is the source of the water supply of the city of Montpelier. The respondent violated this order, and was prosecuted therefor in the city court of Barre, wherein he was convicted and fined. He brings the case here on a bill of exceptions *362 which presents several questions, the most important of which challenges the validity of the order on constitutional grounds.
The respondent treats the order as having been made under G.L. 6317, and insists that it is void for want of notice to him. But we take no time with this, as it is quite apparent that the order is made under G.L. 6313, which provides that the board "may make rules and regulations to prevent the pollution and to secure the sanitary protection of" waters, streams, and ponds used as a source of public water supply. Under this section, the board acts summarily, and the respondent was entitled to no notice other than the publication of the order as provided for in G.L. 6314, which was proved. 12 R.C.L. 1274; State v. Morse,
That the public health is a proper subject for police power protection, and that that power can lawfully be delegated to the State Board of Health, are both unquestioned and unquestionable. And it is not to be forgotten that its orders, when made under statutory authority and in conformity with the law, have all the force and effect of legislative enactments. Piper v. Boston Maine Railroad,
A notice to the respondent in advance of this order was no more required than such a notice would have been if the provisions of the order had been embodied in a special act of the Legislature. In either case, he would be entitled to such notice, if any, as the statute required, and none other. His ignorance of the order, if shown, would not affect his situation. State v. Morse, supra.
It is agreed that Berlin Pond is "boatable" within the meaning of that term as used in our Constitution, Ch. II, § 63. It appeared at the trial that the respondent did, in fact, boat upon the pond, but did nothing that would in any way pollute it or its outlet, from which the city takes its supply.
The respondent stoutly maintains that the order in question exceeds the limits of a valid exercise of the police power, in that it invades the right of private ownership and violates constitutional guaranties.
The police power in its broadest significance is but another name for sovereignty, itself. In re Guerra,
Berlin Pond being public, the respondent has no ownership of its waters or the land beneath them; these belong to the people in their sovereign character, and are held for the public uses for which they are adapted. Hazen v. Perkins,
We cannot say that as matter of law this order was unreasonable and arbitrary. We are aware that cases are to be found in which similar orders have been condemned, but we see no reason for departing from a policy fully established by our decisions of approving a generously free exercise of the power to safeguard the health of the public. In sustaining such regulations as the one before us, we are sufficiently supported by the decisions.
In Com. v. Hyde,
Sprague v. Minon,
The pertinence of Massachusetts cases is the more apparent when we remember that under her "Body of Liberties" adopted about 1647, the "great ponds" of that state — those containing more than ten acres — are not subject to private ownership, but *365
are appropriated to the public and are held much as our "boatable waters" are, for such public uses as they may be made to serve.Atty. General v. Herrick,
Dunham v. New Britain,
As is shown by State v. Morse, supra, wherein we upheld an order prohibiting bathing in this same pond, it is not necessary to the validity of an order of this kind that the prohibited act should do actual harm. It is enough if, in the circumstances, it is reasonable to apprehend that the act may result, directly or indirectly, in the contamination of the water.
The language of Mr. Justice Hughes in Purity Extract T. Co.
v. Lynch,
It does not "clearly appear" that this order does not bear a reasonable relation to the end sought. While the danger of contamination is not quite so plain as it was in the Morse case, we are satisfied of its presence, and that boating on this pond, however harmless it of itself may be, would give rise to a reasonable apprehension that such use might involve mingling with the water foreign matter that would tend to render it unfit for drinking purposes. To quote again from Com. v. Hyde, supra, "It is not irrational for a public board to deem it likely or possible that sources of contamination and germs of disease might have a causal connection with the presence of fishermen upon the ice or waters of a supply of drinking water."
Judgment that there is no error in the proceedings and that therespondent takes nothing by his exceptions. Let execution bedone.
JUSTICE TAYLOR concurred in this opinion, but deceased before same was handed down.