Brown v. City of Lowell
Brown v. City of Lowell
Opinion of the Court
One question, which was alluded to in the argument, and which it was supposed would arise and become material in the present case, was this ; whether the appellant’s right, and his remedy for damage supposed to be done to his estate, by the act of the city in raising the grade of the street in front of it, would depend upon the provisions of the revised statutes, or the special act by which the city was incorporated. But we think, upon a careful consideration of the subject, that this question does not arise. We do not here allude to the point, whether the legislature have power to alter the provisions of an act incorporating the citizens of a limited territory, for municipal purposes ; for, whatever might be the doubt in other cases, in the act incorporating the city of Lowell, (iSV. 1836, c. 128, § 26,) the right is expressly reserved. But the question supposed to arise was, upon which of the acts of the legislature, supposing them rightfully made, the appellant’s remedy depended. That a subsequent legislative act repeals all prior acts repugnant to it, is a principle which results from the unlimited nature of legislative power. The last expression of the legislative will must be carried into effect, as the law of the land; and if, on its true construction, it is directly repugnant to any prior act, it necessarily annuls it, because both cannot exist together. But, to have this effect, it must appear that the legislative will was so exercised; or, in other words, that it was the intention of the legislature, that the subsequent act should so operate, notwithstanding any repugnancy to former acts. It may happen that acts of special legislation may be made in regard to a place, growing out of its peculiar wants, condition, and circumstances; as formerly various acts were passed in relation to the town of Boston. Afterwards, a general act may
It was suggested, in the argument, that a like provision for damage to an abutter was made by the 9th section of the act incorporating the city of Lowell; but we think otherwise. That section enumerates the powers of the city council; and among other things they are authorized to “ cause any street or streets, public places or squares, in the city, to be graded, paved, macadamized, or repaired, and cause permanent sidewalks to be constructed on the same, at the expense-of abutters; and cause drains, &c. to be laid down, and lay out, make and continue or discontinue all city and town ways and streets, widen or straighten county ways, within the city; and any party aggrieved by such building of sidewalks, laying of drains, and alterations of ways, shall have the same remedies as are provided by law for the doings of county commissioners.” Here, a party is not to have a remedy when aggrieved by the exercise of either of these powers indiscriminately, but only in the specific cases enumerated, being in general the cases in which, as the law stood before, a party would be entitled to a remedy. The only one of these enumerated cases, within which the appellant, by any construction, could bring himself, would be that of an “ alteration ” of a way, to his prejudice. But it was held, in Callender v. Marsh, that changing the grade of a street was not an “ alteration,” which entitled an abutter to damages. Nor can the right be derived from the provision authorizing the
The provision in Rev. Sts. c. 25, § 6, is full and precise, both as to the right conferred and the remedy to be pursued; and to understand it, the whole section must be referred to. It is thus: “ When any owner of land, adjoining a highway or town way, in any town or city, shall sustain any damage in his property, by reason of any raising, lowering, or other act done for the purpose of repairing such way, the said owner shall have compensation therefor, to be determined by the selectmen of the town, or the mayor and aldermen of the city; and if the owner shall be aggrieved by such determination of the selectmen, or mayor and aldermen, he may have his damages ascertained by a jury, in like manner as they are to be ascertained in the case of ^aying out highways; and they shall allow, by way of set-off, the benefit, if any, which the complainant may receive by reason of such alteration or repair.” Two things, we think, are observable in this provision. The first is, that damages may be awarded to one who shall sustain damage in his property by reason of any raising, lowering, or other act done for the purpose of repairing such way. It is the act done, we think, and not the vote contemplating a future act, that maj never be done, which gives the claim for damage. There is,
The second consideration upon this provision is, that the compensation is to be determined by the selectmen of the town, or the mayor and aldermen of the city, without regard to the consideration whether this act of fixing the grade is done by surveyors of highways, or mayor and aldermen, or city council, or otherwise. The provision, therefore, in the act incorporating the city of Lowell, that the city council shall have power to regulate the grade of streets, has no tendency to show that they have power to award compensation for damage thereby done. Nor can . a party be deemed aggrieved, so as to warrant the county commissioners to award a jury to assess damages, until the mayor and aldermen have acted upon the claim for compensation ; and this cannot be averred, until an application has been made to them, after the act done, for such compensation. Upon such an application, a compromise may be made, and compensation made by agreement, or a committee or arbitrators may be agreed on, and thus the expense of a jury avoided.
Under this view of the law, and upon the facts stated, it appears to us clear, that the county commissioners had no authority to grant a warrant for a jury, at the time, and under the circumstances; and that the decision of the court of common pleas, disallowing the verdict returned by the jury, must be affirmed.
The appellant was not an aggrieved party, within the mean ing of this statute. The vote of the city council, passed in 1841, proposing to alter the grade of the street, was not an “ act done,” which could give him a claim to damages. The
After the vote of June 1842, by which the city council approved and affirmed the actual grading, which was less onerous to the appellant than the grade contemplated by the prior vote, no application was made to the mayor and aldermen for damages. We think an application to the city council, of which the mayor and aldermen are made a constituent branch, by the first section of the act incorporating the city, would not have been a compliance with the statute. On such petition, the mayor and aldermen might have voted him a compensation, and that vote been negatived by the common council. Could he have claimed the damages, or appealed from the decision to the county commissioners, as a person aggrieved by the determination of the mayor and aldermen ? We think not. But, in truth, no application was made to the city council, after the vote of June 1842, by which the actual grading was confirmed. The vote of the council, giving the appellant leave to withdraw his peti tion, was a vote on a petition presented long before the vote of June 1842, and founded on the vote of the city council of 1841, on which he had no claim for damages. The appellant there fore was not an aggrieved party, within the meaning of the stata ute, who could apply to the county commissioners for a jury to assess his damages; and the county commissioners had no jurisdiction.
By the Rev. Sts. c. 25, <§> 6, there is no limitation prescribed in terms, within which an application must be made to the selectmen or mayor and aldermen. Whether there is such a limitation, by implication, by reference to the case of laying out highways, we give no opinion. The case of Goddard v. City of Boston, 20 Pick. 407, was decided on the statutes, as they stood before the revised statutes.
Upon the other ground taken in the argument, that the
The judgment of the court of common pleas, setting asida and disallowing the verdict, is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.