
    [Sullivan,
    December, 1887.]
    Loverin & a. v. School-District.
    In Equity. Reported 64 N. H. 102.
    
      A. S. Wait, for the plaintiffs.
   Doe, C. J.

The school-house lot having been conveyed to District No. 3, and the district having paid for it and built a schoolhouse upon it, an injunction against building a house there at the district’s expense would not accomplish the plaintiffs’ purpose. There is a prayer for a decree requiring the selectmen to assess a tax on District No. 3 for building a house on another lot which has not been bought, and which is not public property. If equity could give such a remedy under other circumstances, it cannot order a house to be built on land where the builders would be trespassers. It would first be necessary to set in motion the power of eminent domain for the acquisition of a public right. The prayer of the bill does not reach that point; and in the present position of the case the question of legal location is not a practical one. No objection being made to an injunction against the collection of the tax of $500, there will be a decree' for the plaintiffs on that part of the case.

Case discharged.

Clark, J., did not sit: the others concurred.  