Appleton Paper & Pulp Co. v. Kimberly & Clark Co.

75 N.W. 889, 100 Wis. 195, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 199
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 889 (Appleton Paper & Pulp Co. v. Kimberly & Clark Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appleton Paper & Pulp Co. v. Kimberly & Clark Co., 75 N.W. 889, 100 Wis. 195, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 199 (Wis. 1898).

Opinion

Maeshall, J.

Tbe finding of fact as to tbe raising of tbe dam, challenged by plaintiff, is sustained by substantially all tbe direct, as well as tbe circumstantial, evidence in tbe case bearing on tbe subject. O’Keefe, wbo helped make alterations in tbe flume in 1863, and was very familiar with tbe situation then and for years afterwards, testified that tbe new dam was about one foot higher than tbe old one, and appears to have reasoned from bis knowledge of tbe depth of tbe water in tbe bulkhead in 1863 and tbe depth at tbe time of tbe trial. Tbe engineer in charge of constructing tbe new dam testified that tbe old one bad settled from ten to fifteen inches in places, and that tbe new structure, as be remembered it, was placed at tbe average height of tbe old one. Several witnesses testified that tbe water above tbe dam was higher after tbe building of tbe new structure than before, some placing tbe difference as much as two or three feet. That array of evidence, in connection with tbe circumstance that tbe old dam was made of spars and was an old structure as early as 1862, there being no substantial evidence to outweigh it, seems to make a strong case in favor of tbe court’s finding. Certainly, we cannot say there is a clear preponderance of evidence against it.

It follows, therefore, that tbe findings of fact made by tbe trial court must all stand as verities in tbe case, and that both appeals come down to and turn on tbe meaning of tbe descriptive words contained in tbe grants under which plaintiff claims, tbe principal and really only one that need be construed being that of September 20, 1862. To that, plaintiff’s rights are referable. A later deed was made under which plaintiff claims, but clearly, as held by tbe trial court, it does not affect tbe main question we are called upon to decide. It is needless to refer to tbe familiar rules of construction in discussing this case, till we proceed far enough to discover some uncertainty of meaning in tbe language to be considered, calling for such reference. There [200]*200is no need to construe that which is plain, is a maxim of the first importance in dealing with contracts judicially. The purpose of interpretation is to give effect to the intention of parties so far as that can be done without violating the rules of language or of law, and so far as such intention can be read from the words they saw fit to use, by the aid of all the helps that may properly be resorted to for that purpose. But the very fact that construction is called for suggests existing uncertainty. Where that does not exist, — where language is plain,— there is no reason for construction. Effect must then be given to the obvious meaning, and not, by means of judicial construction, make a contract for parties different from that which they made for themselves.

“ Capacity of the bulkhead now there: ” What do those words mean as used in the grant under consideration ? They plainly refer to a then existing bulkhead, and conveyed the right to use the water through it to its capacity, or an equivalent amount of water, for the purpose of creating power. Unlike many deeds conveying water privileges for power, the grant in question did not convey a certain number of inches of water under a given head, as in Jackson Milling Co. v. Chandos, 82 Wis. 437, or a certain number of inches of water without specifying any head, as in Blanchard v. Doering, 21 Wis. 477. The grant did not convey water to the full extent and capacity of a bulkhead 13.07 feet wide by 6.89 feet deep. If we were to read the grant as if such language were included therein, we would fail to give effect to the significant words of limitation, “the ” and “ now there.” They refer, unmistakably, to an existing bulkhead, and the water privilege conveyed was referable, as a means of measurement, to that particular bulkhead, with all the surrounding conditions, including the rack to prevent débris from passing into the flume, the size of the flume, its shape, its location, and all obstructions in any waj^ influencing the flow of water. That is so obviously the meaning of the lan[201]*201guage in question that we have nothing to do with the rules of construction in determining that question. There is room for but one reasonable meaning; therefore no room for construction and no need for a reference to authorities.

The parties haying defined the water conveyed by limiting it to the capacity of a particular opening under the conditions surrounding it as stated, it left the amount somewhat difficult of ascertainment, it is true, especially after a lapse of many years, a change in the conditions, and a desire to use the water through a different bulkhead and with different attachments. But so long as the parties saw fit to insert in the grant plain words of limitation, pointing to particular instruments for measuring the water, we must hold to such plain meaning, and not, for the purpose of relieving parties from difficulties which were not properly provided against at the proper time, put words into the grant by construction. That would be a violation of rules of law by judicial construction, and courts are not permitted to do that. Mississippi River Logging Co. v. Wheelihan, 94 Wis. 96.

In Loverin v. Walker, 44 N. H. 489, we have a good illustration of the strictness with which courts hold parties to-the meaning of language used in conveying water privileges, by viewing it in the light of the circumstances existing at the creation of the grant. The description of the privilege there conveyed was, the right to take sufficient water for one tub wheel.” It was in a conveyance of a mill formerly operated by such a wheel, but the wheel had been carried away by a freshet a short time previous. There were other owners of power at the same point, and it was evident their rights were not intended to be infringed upon. If the conveyance were so construed as to permit a tub wheel of any size, that would carry the right to all the water of . the stream. In those circumstances the court readily reached the conclusion that “ the grantee was not obliged to use a tub wheel, or the particular tub wheel that had been carried [202]*202away; but be could take no more water than the amount required to operate a wheel of the kind and size of the one previously in place;” that the language of the deed was clearly intended to designate the old wheel as an instrument for measuring the quantity of water conveyed by the grant, but not to designate the' means of using the water; and that it was left to be determined what amount of water was required for such a wheel as the old one, and then that it could be used as the grantee should elect.

So, in Doan v. Metcalf, 46 Iowa, 120, cited by defendants’ counsel, the language was, “ the right to use water to the amount of the issue of the wheel now in said mill, supposed to be sis hundred inches.” The court held that the' water necessary to operate that particular wheel, up to the capacity of its working power, was the measure of water conveyed; that it was left for experience and mechanical skill, aided by the laws of hydraulics, to determine such amount, and that when determined, the water was available to operate any wheel which the grantee might see fit to use; that the wheel mentioned in the grant did not limit the manner or means by which the water was to be used, but designated merely the instrument for measuring the quantity which the grantee could take under the grant.

Again, in Cummings v. Blanchard (N. H.), 36 Atl. Rep.

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75 N.W. 889, 100 Wis. 195, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appleton-paper-pulp-co-v-kimberly-clark-co-wis-1898.