Court Opinion

ID: 8505046
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:26:16.082476+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:50.977526
License: Public Domain

Gilchrist, J.
In the ease of Willey v. Epping, lately decided in this court, it was held, upon the authority of Hampton v. Coffin, 4 N. H. Rep. 517, that the land-owner was entitled to the damages awarded to him, notwithstanding the highway had been discontinued prior to the *78passage of the act of June 23, 1842, which, in terms, limited the recovery to the amount of damages actually sustained. Whatever may have been the precise force of the words of that act, its construction must be such that it shall not divest interests that have actually attached under a judgment, in order to avoid a constitutional exception that might be taken to a different construction.
This case does not differ from that of Willey v. Epping in any particular that should affect its merits. By the laying out the road and the award of damages, a right attached to the intestate to demand and recover the sum awarded. As in Coffin v. Hampton, the public acquired an equivalent in the right of way, for such time as they might see fit to enjoy it. The value of that right was judicially determined by the committee, who were fully instructed as to the contingent or determinable interest acquired by the public, and must be supposed' to have made their award with suitable reference to the nature of the right given in exchange for the sumí adjudged by them.
Their doings became a matter of record, and the right of the town to enter upon the land of the intestate, and construct a public way upon it, together with the corresponding right of the intestate to demand, sue for and recover the sum assessed, as an equivalent for the easement to which his land was subjected, became severally established. If the intestate forbore to assert his claim, the right of the town was not impaired by such forbearance; nor, on the other - hand, was the right of the proprietor, by force of the proceedings and by the record, impaired, or capable of being impaired, as the law then stood, by any forbearance, or by any act of the town, taken with a view of renouncing the rights they had acquired by those proceedings.
The Revised Statutes, chap. 52, sect. 5, contain a similar provision with that of the act of 1842, for which that *79section was substituted ; and although the phraseology is slightly different, probably would be held, like that of 1842, to protect the towns against such a claim as the present, arising after its passage, without any regard to the time of commencing the action, provided the road should be discontinued before judgment. But its operation cannot, as has been said, be permitted to conflict with rights established before it was passed. The claim of the plaintiff appears, therefore, to have survived the legislation that has intervened, which must be limited to cases subsequently arising, as well as the act of the town of Unity.
There appears to he no substantial objection to the demand that was made. The demand required was not different from that required in ordinary eases in which such an act is a necessary preliminary to an action. The capacity of the plaintiff to demand and receive the money was not unknown to the parties upon whom the demand was made, nor was it questioned by them. The thing demanded is well described where it is so indicated as to leave no doubt or misunderstanding as to what is intended by the request.
The right to recover the damages assessed attached to the party entitled, immediately upon the decree of the court, confirming the report. But the law imposed no other duty upon the town, as to the time of making the payment, except only that it must have been done, or a tender made, before they could make the road. In the absence of any action on the part of the proprietor himself, we think that it was reasonable for the town to seek him and offer to pay, when they were ready to enter upon the land for the purpose of exerting the power over it acquired by the decree. N. H. Laws 574.
As the town have not built the road, or attempted to do so, this would not seem to be a ease in which the money was detained by the debtor contrary to duty, until a demand was made by the plaintiff
*80Nor does it fall within the description of any of the other eases in which interest is taxable. It is not like a judgment, a liquidation of a demand; it is itself the inception of the demand; it rests on no promise; it is not in the nature of damages for a tort, nor money of the intestate, received by the town and misapplied.
• The award and consequent decree bear certain strong analogies to a judgment which carries interest. But a judgment is rather an act of the party himself, who procures it for the express purpose of enforcing an antecedent ¿•claim; while the award of land damages is a matter into which both the parties may have been brought in invitum, and affords no evidence whatever that the money is detained contrary to the wishes of the party entitled to it. There is no necessary presumption that he wishes to receive it, until the time when the town would be required to pay it for the purpose of justifying their entry upon the land, unless he makes a demand, and so manifests his wishes ; and, if the demand is not complied with, establishes the adverse relation between the parties that lays the foundation for demanding interest. Mahurin v. Bickford, 6 N. H. Rep. 567; Reid v. Rens, Glass Factory, 8 Cow. Rep. 436.
The result therefore is that judgment must be rendered for the plaintiff for the unpaid balance, together with interest from the time of the demand.