Dwight v. County Commissioners of Hampden
Dwight v. County Commissioners of Hampden
Opinion of the Court
The simple question presented in this case is whether or not these petitioners were legally entitled to have a jury to assess their damages, though one of their co-tenants in common did not join in the petition to the respondents for that purpose. If the respondents were legally bound to grant the prayer of the petitioners for a jury to estimate the damages, the petitioners are now entitled to a mandamus; otherwise, they are not so entitled. The decision of this question depends entirely on certain provisions of the revised statutes.
Before the revised statutes, it was decided by this court, that one tenant in common of land, over which the commissioners had laid out a highway, could not apply for a jury, without the joinder of the other co-tenants. Merrill v. Berkshire, 11 Pick. 274. That decision was founded on the well established and familiar principle of law, that tenants in common must join in an action to recover damages for-injuries to their common estate.
But there are some new provisions, introduced into the revised statutes, which have changed the law on this subject, and conclusively settle the present question. The sections from the forty eighth to the fifty third, inclusive, of the twenty fourth chapter of the revised statutes, are new, and were introduced with a view to afford a more complete remedy, than before existed, for all parties, who have several estates or interests at the same time in the same parcel of real estate. Though this statute may have reference, as its primary object, to cases of estates in dower, and other life estates, with the reversions and remainders in fee; or to dwelling-houses or stores, with the land appurtenant, let to a number of tenants for different terms of years, on conditions creating different rights and liabilities, and exposing them to different degrees of injury; still it is equally applicable, both in its terms and according to its true intent and spirit, to cases of estates owned and held by tenants in common. The provisions of the sections of the statute referred to are designed to enable all parties having several estates or interests to obtain justice, as the
The respondents in their answer state, that they refused a jury wholly on the ground that Mary Bliss, one of the tenants in common, did not join in the petition. This decision would have been correct as the law was before the revised statutes,
The decision in this case in no way conflicts with the decision in the case of Burrows v. Taft, 11 Met. 263, which was referred to in the argument. That case is distinct from the present; and in that no reference was made either by the counsel or the court to the new provisions of the revised" statutes.
A mandamus must issue to the respondents, to summon a jury for the assessment of damages only, all the proceedings in the case to be in accordance with the provisions of the twenty fourth chapter of the revised statutes, sections forty eight to fifty three, inclusive.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jonathan Dwight & others v. The County Commissioners of Hampden
- Status
- Published