Attorney General ex rel. Muskegon Booming Co. v. Evart Booming Co.

34 Mich. 462, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 201
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 34 Mich. 462 (Attorney General ex rel. Muskegon Booming Co. v. Evart Booming Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General ex rel. Muskegon Booming Co. v. Evart Booming Co., 34 Mich. 462, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 201 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Cooley, Ch. J:

The pleading of the attorney general in this case is somewhat anomalous, and we deem it important to a proper presentation of our views that a very full statement of its substance should be given.

It begins by saying that, “Informing showeth unto your [468]*468honorable court, Andrew J. Smith, attorney general of the state of Michigan, by and upon the relation of the Muskegon Booming Company,” that it is the business of said company to run, raft and boom logs in and upon the Muskegon river, which is a stream navigable for running, rafting, driving and floating logs, lumber and timber, and for a part of the distance navigable for steamboats, in which business it has been engaged for eight years or more, and is engaged the present season, that is to say, the spring and summer of 1875; that during the spring of the present season said company took possession of the logs and drive on said river, by and with the consent and at the request of the owners of logs therein and thereon, and by and with such consent has been running such logs; that there is a large quantity of logs so taken possession of and driven, to-wit: about two hundred million feet, and that by taking possession thereof they have entered into contracts with the owners to run, drive and raft the same to points below on the river where they are to be manufactured;

That by law said company has a lien on the logs for the payment for its services in so running, driving and rafting, and also in booming the same, and that the owners of the logs cut and placed them in the river for the purpose of running and driving the same, or of having the said company run, drive and raft the same to the city of Muskegon for manufacture into timber and lumber.

The information then proceeds to aver that “your orator” further informing shows that at a point in said Muskegon river, about two miles above the village of Evart, the said Evart Booming Company have made, erected and placed in said river booms, sticks, piers and piles; that at a point in said river about one mile below said village of Evart the said Evart Booming Company have made, erected and placed in said river dams and large numbers of sticks, piers and piles; that the channel of said river at the point where said booms are so made and erected is about the width of three hundred feet; that the said Evart Booming Company have [469]*469filled up the channel of said river with logs, booms, piers, piles and timber from the aforesaid point in said river, about two miles above said village of Bvart, where the lower end of said boom is, extending up the channel of said river about the distance of half a mile, leaving open for the said distance of the channel of said river a place or channel only about eighteen or twenty feet in width; that- for the distance of about half a mile aforesaid along the channel of said river the said Bvart Booming Company maintain their booms on each side of the center of said river; that they have standing in said booms large quantities of logs and timber nearly or quite covering the surface of the water of said river; that of the surface left uncovered there is a very narrow space, only about eighteen or twenty feet in width;that all the rest of the surface and channel of said river, except the said eighteen or twenty feet in width at or near the center of said stream, and between the booms of the paid Bvart Booming Company, is filled with logs and timber and entirely filled and obstructed; that at the head of the boom said Evart Booming Company have, during a great portion of the time, booms and boom sticks extended entirely across the channel of said river, filling and obstructing the said channel, hereinbefore mentioned as being eighteen or twenty feet wide, as well as the rest of the channel of said river, and closing it to navigation for logs, lumber, timber and all floatables;

That “your orator” shows that the operations aforesaid of the said Evart Booming Company, carried on and conducted in the manner in which they are carrying them on and conducting them, obstruct, hinder, impede' and delay the navigation of said Muskegon river at the point where the said river passes through the village of Evart, and that the said Muskegon Booming Company, in running, rafting and driving logs aforesaid, are greatly hindered and delayed in the navigation of said river; that they are put to great trouble and large expense in running their logs by and through said village of Bvart, and “your orator” alleges [470]*470that the said obstructions of navigation constitute a nuisance and a purpresture;

That about the 11th day of June, 1875, the said Muskegon Booming Company had in the drive in said river, at or near the said village of Evart, above the booms of said Evart Booming Company, about seventy-five million feet of saw-logs; that the said company was then engaged in driving said logs in and upon said river to the city of Muskegon; that the said Evart Booming Company stopped and detained the said logs by and above said booms and dams; that by their said operations in said river they caused the water in said river to set back and above the natural channel thereof, and to throw the said logs in charge of said Muskegon Booming Company back and upon the land above and beyond the natural channel of said Muskegon river; that they have held the said logs there, or large quantities of them, for a long period of time, to wit: for several days, and would not let them pass through said booms and dams, and that in consequence thereof the said logs were thrown back and out of the channel of said river, and the said Muskegon Booming Company was obliged and compelled to employ and keep at work large numbers of men to sack off and roll into said river and the waters thereof, the said logs and timbers so as aforesaid floated and set back upon the land by the operations of the said Evart Booming Company; and by means thereof the said Muskegon Booming Company sustained great and irreparable damage and injury.

The information then proceeds to set out with more particularity the injuries which the relator suffers from the wrongful acts of the respondent, and which it will suffer if those wrongful acts are persisted in, and to negative the pretenses under which the action of the respondent is attempted to be justified.

It avers that the Evart Booming Company have not the necessary and usual facilities at their booms, or at the head of their dams, for assorting the logs that float down the [471]*471said river, and that they are and have been negligent and unskillful in erecting and maintaining, and in acquiring and owning the necessary and usual facilities for booming and assorting logs in and upon said river at the village of Evart aforesaid; and the other booms and facilities for booming and assorting logs on said river are entirely inadequate for the wants and necessities of booming operations at said point, and they fall greatly short of the facilities and means that might be had in and upon said river by using reasonable diligence, skill and care in erecting booms and assorting places on said river.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Mich. 462, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-ex-rel-muskegon-booming-co-v-evart-booming-co-mich-1876.