38 N.H. 59 | N.H. | 1859
In laying ont a highway, land upon which buildings are erected, and which comes within the limits of the highway, may be taken. A building has no greater immunity in this respect than a fence; each is a structure erected or maintained by the owner for the purposes for which it is appropriate. The one may be of greater value and consequence than the other, but there is nothing in the use, or in the nature of the property, to exempt it from the public servitude, or the power of eminent domain. Pierce v. Somersworth, 10 N. H. 369, 375.
"When land thus occupied is taken for a highway, the award of damages should be in proportion to the injury sustained. The buildings remain the property of the owners, but the towns acquire the right to remove them beyond the limits of the highway. Baker v. Shephard, 24 N. H. (4 Fost.) 208. In that case it was held, that by the laying out of a highway the public acquire no right to use any trees or timber growing upon the land for the purpose of building or repairing the road. And it was said by Bell, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, that the only right the public acquire in relation to such trees, is that of cutting them down, and removing them to a convenient distance, for the use of the owner.
But where any interest belonging to the owners of lands is taken, they are entitled to notice and damages. Pierce v. Somersworth, 10 N. H. 369; State v. Dover, 10 N. H. 397. And the doings of selectmen, in laying out highways, cannot be supported, unless it appears that due recompense was allowed to the owners of the lands through which they were laid out, and that the owners had an opportunity to be heard upon the subject of the laying out and the damages. Pritchard v. Atkinson, 3 N. H. 335.
Private property cannot be taken for the public use, except in the manner prescribed by law, and when taken in any other way the act is a trespass. And when a highway is laid out over land, and no notice given to the
As no notice was given of the hearing upon the laying out of this highway, either to the respondent, who was in possession of the land and building at the time of the laying out, and who had erected the building, and had an interest in the premises, under his bond, or to the person who owned the fee in the land, the laying out, to the extent of this lot, was invalidand that invalidity could not be cured, unless by some act of waiver.
Long use of a way is evidence that it was legally laid out. Pritchard v. Atkinson, 3 N. H. 325. Application for land damages, under the statute, might also be a waiver of notice; and other facts might be supposed to exist which would amount to an acquiescence in the laying out. But nothing of the ldnd appears in this case ; on the contrary, there has been steady resistance. The buildings and fence have been maintained, and the road has not been built over the land where they are placed.
According to the doctrine of Baker v. Shephard, it would seem that even had the highway been legally laid out over the land where the buildings and fence stand, an indictment could not be maintained for not removing them, unless it should appear that damages had been awarded on that account. But no notice having been given, the laying out was clearly invalid, so far as this respondent and the owner of the land are concerned. As to them, there is no highway where the buildings and fence are; the land has never been legally condemned to the public use, and the continuancy of the obstructions complained of is not a nuisance for which this indictment will lie; and, according to the agreement stated in the case, a not. pros. must be entered.