134 Mass. 267 | Mass. | 1883
The St. of 1871, c. 183, authorized the city of Fall River to take the waters of the North Watuppa Pond, or any part of them, for the purpose of supplying its inhabitants with pure water. Under the authority of this statute, the city in 1873 passed ah order taking one and a half million gallons per day- of the waters of the pond.
Section 10 of the act provides that “the city of Fall River shall be liable to pay all damages that shall be sustained by any person or persons in their property by the taking respectively of the entire waters of said North Watuppa Pond, or by the taking of any less proportion of said waters, as authorized by the second and third sections of this act, or by the taking of any land, rights of way, water rights or easements.”
The respondent contends that the State is the absolute owner of a great pond, and of the land under it; that it may drain or fill it at pleasure; that the riparian owners on a stream which is its outlet have no rights in the waters of the pond; and therefore that these petitioners have sustained no damage.
It is not necessary to discuss the question as to what may be the extreme rights of the State as to draining, filling or otherwise using the waters of a great pond. If there may be contingencies in which it might divert the waters to the injury of persons owning water rights on the outlet without making compensation, it is clear that the Legislature has not claimed or asserted any such right in this case.
The riparian proprietors on Fall River certainly have water rights, as against all the world except the State. The statute does not give to the respondent the unconditional right to take the waters of Watuppa Pond; it gives the right to take them only upon the condition that the city shall pay all damages to any person injured in his property or water rights by the diversion of the water. It is too clear to admit of doubt, that the intention of the statute was to provide for compensation to the riparian owners on Fall River whose water rights as used by them were injured. Such has been the uniform construction of similar statutes authorizing cities or aqueduct corporations to take the waters of great ponds. Ipswich Mills v. County Commissioners, 108 Mass. 363. Bailey v. Woburn, 126 Mass. 416. Plymouth v. County Commissioners, 16 Gray, 341. It may be added, that the statute we are considering, in §§ 4 and 5, recognizes the Watuppa Reservoir Company and the other petitioners as having water rights which are protected by the statute.
The respondent also contends that, if any petitioner has a claim against the city, it is the Watuppa Reservoir Company alone. This company was incorporated in 1826, “ for the purpose of constructing a reservoir of water in the Wattuppa Ponds, so called,
The parties have agreed that, in the view of their rights which we have taken, each of the petitioners is injured by the act of the city in taking the water, and have also agreed upon the amount of the damages in each case, except in that of the American Print Works. In that case alone is any question raised as to the measure of damages.
The American Print Works was established in 1835. In 1857 the Fall River Iron Works, which owned the Metacomet Mill, the lowest mill on Fall River, and whose only title to the use of the water was that of a riparian owner, conveyed to the American Print Works the land on which its buildings are situated, and “ one eighth of the current flow of the Fall River.” A canal was dug from the pond of the Metacomet Mill to the pond of the American Print Works, and since then the American Print Works has used the water thus supplied, at first for power, and lately for bleaching, cleansing and other operations of print works. Although its works are not directly on the
Upon the whole case, therefore, we are of opinion that the rulings of the Superior Court were correct.
Exceptions overruled.
The parties agreed that, if this corporation was legally entitled to use the water for purposes other than for power, the damages were $10,000; otherwise, the damages were $741.60.