36 Conn. 149 | Conn. | 1869
If the plaintiff is entitled to recover full costs in this case, it is difficult to conceive a case of the kind where
But the statute does not deem justices of the peace quali tied to try the title to land, a right of way, or the right to the use of water, and an exception .is therefore made of cases where parties claim to have been injured in the enjoyment of these rights, and such rights are contested on the trial.
But in a case like the present, where the right of the plain tiff to the use of the water was not called in question by the pleadings of the parties, and was not controverted by evidence on the trial, but the right was virtually conceded to be in the plaintiff, and the only controversy was as to the doing by the defendant of the acts complained of, there is. no reason for discrimination in favor of the plaintiff in respect to costs.
The plaintiff claims that this construction of the law puts it in the power of the defendant in all cases to subject the plaintiff to the loss of his costs under the statute. This is true in theory, but in practice the plaintiff runs but little risk-In most cases he knows when he brings his suit whether the right he sets up will be controverted or not. If he entertains doubt on the subject he can easily protect himself by bringing his action before some justice of the peace, and then remove his cause to the Superior Court by appeal if his right is contested. But if this were not so the claim of the plaintiff furnishes no reason for giving a construction to the law that would nullify its provisions. We must construe the act as we find it. Our province is simply judicial, and when we declare what the law is our duty is fully performed.
The following cases have an important bearing upon the question in “this case. Scovill v. Seeley, 14 Conn., 238 ; Bishop v. Seeley, 18 Conn., 389; Mansfield v. Church, 21 Conn., 73; Arnold v. Kellogg, 25 Conn., 248.
There is no error in the judgment complained of.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.