Farrington v. Blish
Farrington v. Blish
Opinion of the Court
After a continuance nisi, the opinion of the Court was drawn up and delivered by
The case under consideration, is a complaint provided for by the statute, for tbe support and regulation of mills. Statute of 1821, c. 45. It is a process specially given, which should contain averments of all the facts, made essential by the statute, to enable the complainant to avail himself of the remedy prescribed.
The statute makes it lawful for any person who has erected, or who may erect any watermill on his own land, or on the land of another, by tbe consent of the owner, for the working of which a suitable head of water is necessary, to continue such head, subject
To bring the case therefore within the statute, it was necessary for the complainant to set forth, that tire respondents had erected a watermill on their own land, or on the land of another with his own consent, and that it became necessary to raise a suitable head of water to work it, whereby the land of the complainant was flowed, with an averment of the damages he had sustained thereupon. The complaint before us contains no averment, that the respondents had erected, or caused to be erected, on their own land, or on the land of any other person by his consent, any watermill whatever; or that they had any concern or interest in any such mill, or that it was necessary to raise any head of water, for the working of any mill.
The complaint then is clearly defective, in omitting averments essential to its prosecution. The respondents, in their pleadings in the Common Pleas, set up a right to flow in virtue of a grant from the proprietors of the Kennebec Purchase, who were the owners at the time, of the land flowed, as well as of the land where the dam was erected, to John Getchell, his heirs and assigns, under whom they claim. These pleadings were by permission withdrawn in the Supreme Court, but if they had remained, they do not supply the omissions in the complaint.
But it is insisted, that the defects in the complaint are cured by the verdict. It is true, that the Court are cautious how they arrest judgment after verdict. They will not intend any thing to overturn it, and will overrule objections, which they would have listened to on demurrer. A verdict will cure a title defectively set forth; but will not cure a defective title: English v. Burnell, 2 Wilson, 258; Weston v. Mann, 3 Burrow, 1725. Where a plaintiff has stated his ground of action defectively or inaccurately, all circumstances necessary to complete what is thus imperfectly stated, are presumed to have been proved, after verdict. But no such presumption can be made, where the plaintiff has omitted to state a
The limitation of the rule, was well stated by Mr. Justice Buller, in Spieres v. Parker, 1 T. R. 141, “that nothing was to be presumed after verdict, but what was expressly stated in the declaration, or what was necessarily implied from the facts which were stated.” And in Bartlet v. Crozier, 17 Johns. R. 139, Chancellor Kent, whose opinion was unanimously sustained by the Court of Errors, says, “ the Court are never to presume a cause of action, even after verdict, when none appears.” The modem law upon this subject, is stated in a learned note to Spencer v. Overton, 1 Day, 186, said to have been drawn by Judge Reeve, which is cited with approbation in Little v. Thompson, 2 Greenl. 228. It is there said, “ the idea which has been entertained by respectable lawyers, that after verdict, the Court will presume facts, not stated, necessary to support legal inferences, appears to be unfounded,” And the same general doctrine is sustained by the Court in Williams v. Hingham, &c. Turnpike, 4 Pick. 341.
In Kingsley v. Bill et al., 9 Mass. R. 198, a promise to perform an award, although not averred, was held to be implied from the allegation, that the parties had submitted to arbitration. But the want of an allegation, that the award was published, was deemed a fatal defect, after verdict.
Richards v. Eastman, 12 Mass. R. 505, was trespass for taking and carrying away mahogany tables, chairs and bureau. After verdict, the Court refused to arrest the judgment, because the number must have been proved at the trial. This would result necessarily,
It has been urged that all, which the statute has made essential, is implied in the term mill-dam, which is to be found in the complaint ; and we are referred to the ninth and tenth sections of the statute, where that term is used. The term is there first introduced, and it must be understood that it is so, with reference to the previous sections, which relate to a watermill, with which a dam to raise a suitable head of water, is necessarily connected. It is true, a mill-dam supposes a mill, actually built or intended to be. But the respondents may have erected the dam, and other persons the mill. The erection of a water mill, for the working of which a suitable head of water is necessary, is made the foundation of the complaint. And if the respondents have erected a mill-dam, we cannot regard it as implied, that they have also erected a mill. The head of water depends upon what the mill requires, upon which alone its continuance is lawful; subject to the special remedy for the owner of the land flowed, provided by statute, which is to be pursued against the owner or occupant of the mill.
The opinion of the Court is, that the complaint is fatally defective, as it stands.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas S. Farrington v. William T. Blishs.
- Status
- Published