Adams v. Bradshaw
New Hampshire Supreme Court
599 A.2d 481 (1991)
- Written by Sean Carroll, JD
Facts
In 1932, the Town of Monroe (defendant) built a municipal sewer system. The system discharged untreated sewage directly into the Connecticut River, a practice that became illegal in 1988. Town residents voted to discontinue the sewer system and permit the town to build individual sewage systems on affected properties. Owners of some of those affected properties (plaintiffs) sued the town and its selectman (defendants). The owners claimed that they had a vested interest in their connection to and use of the sewage system. The trial court agreed and ruled that the town’s discontinuance of its municipal sewer system constituted inverse condemnation requiring just compensation to the affected property owners. The town appealed.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Thayer, J.)
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