Brown v. Cooper

33 L.R.A. 61, 98 Iowa 444
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 22, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 33 L.R.A. 61 (Brown v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Cooper, 33 L.R.A. 61, 98 Iowa 444 (iowa 1896).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

At the time of the commencement of this action, Susan Brown owned fifty-seven sixty-fourths, N. E. Brown, two sixty-fourths, W. S. Cooper, four sixty-fourths, and the Anchor Mill Company, one sixty-fourth of the dam, and water power referred to in the above statement of the case. The appellants are mother and son, and their interests are united. They commenced this action to partition the water power among the respective owners, and asked that the shares of each be established and confirmed, and that referees be appointed to make partition, or, if it is apparent that the same cannot be equitably divided, then that a sale of the property and a division of the proceeds be made between the parties according to their respective interests. The defendants answered, pleading their interests in the property. They each objected to a sale, and asked that the property be repaired, and that the share of water belonging to them be delivered. On the first, day of November, 1889, the court, on these pleadings, entered an interlocutory decree, establishing and confirming the shares of the respective parties in and to the property, and decreed that each was liable to contribute at all times, in proportion to his respective interest, to the expense of maintaining the property in good condition; that the plaintiff was entitled to have the water power and property partitioned and admeasured, so that each owner should receive his proper share, and no more, of the water and water power, and no more at any and all stages of water, and in whatsoever [448]*448condition said power or improvements may be. The court also appointed James Emmerson, of Williamette, Mass., Samuel Sherwood, of Independence, Iowa, and P. Mullaly, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, referees, to make partition; directed them to set apart the respective interests and shares of the parties; ordered them to make such recommendations for further maintenance and use of the interests of the parties as they might deem advisable; and continued the action for further proceedings. Afterwards, a change was made in the personnel of the referees, and Clemens Hersehel, of New York City, a hydraulic engineer, Prof. Williams, of Mt. Vernon, Iowa, a civil engineer, and Samuel Sherwood, of Independence, Iowa, a practical miller, were substituted in place of the referees originally appointed. On the twenty-seventh day of January these referees reported, that an actual partition or division of the property into the required fractional parts, was impracticable, without an indefinitely continuing, intelligent operation and supervision of the appliances that might be erected, and that if such supervision was had, the attendant expense and difficulties involved, would render such method inadvisable and inexpedient; that it would materially injure and diminish the rights of some of the owners of the property; and that, in their judgment, a sale of the property and a division of the proceeds, was the only practical method of partition. The appellees, Cooper and the Anchor Mill Company, filed objections to this report, and moved to set it aside; and the other parties moved to confirm the same, and for an order for the sale of the property. The motion to confirm was overruled, and appellees’ objections to the report were sustained, and the Browns excepted to these rulings. Afterward, J. T. Fanning, W. Y. Clark and A. H. Conner, were appointed referees, to make partition in kind, [449]*449and on the twenty-fifth of October, 1893, they filed their report, proposing a plan and recommendation for partition. They recommended the erection of adjustable measuring weirs, to be made permanent and adjustable, so as to measure out to each owner the share of water to which he was entitled. The expense of such an erection they estimated at eight thousand dollars. They also recommended that the court direct the owners of the property to employ a competent inspector of the weirs, who should, as often as necessary, see that they were kept in proper adj ustment and repair, and that they did in fact partition the water in proper proportion at all stages of ready available flow of the river. They also found that the dam was not then in good condition, and that partitioning the flow under such conditions would not be warranted, without the expenditure of large sums of money for repairing and bettering the condition of the property. They therefore recommended that the crest of the dam be raised, that the dam itself should be strengthened and made permanently stable in its present position; that it should be made water-tight, and that leakage in the head-races should be stopped. The estimated cost of making the repairs and improvements suggested by the referees is from seven thousand dollars to twelve thousand dollars. Upon the coming in of this report, the plaintiffs moved to set the same aside, and for an order directing the referees to proceed with a sale of the property and a division of the proceeds 'thereof, or that the cause be referred to other referees for final disposition. The defendants filed an application for an order directing the repairs of the property in accord with the recommendations of the referees. The plaintiffs filed a resistance to this last-named application. The motion of plaintiffs to set aside, and the application of defendants for an order to repair, were submitted to the court, and the [450]*450former was overruled, and the report of the commissioners approved, and the application for an order directing the repairs was in effect sustained. To each and all of these rulings the plaintiffs excepted.. They now appeal to this court, and in their arguments question the validity of all the orders and rulings made by the district court. They complain more particularly of the order for the construction of the weirs and gates, and for the appointment of an inspector, and strenuously insist that the court had no power to make the order for repairing and improving the dam.

Before proceeding to a discussion of the questions presented, it is perhaps advisable to state some of the facts a little more explicitly. It appears that N. E. Brown owns a lot on the east side of the river, on which stands a mill. Susan Brown owns a lot adjoining that of her co-plaintiff, and also lots on the west side of the river adjoining the race-way. The defendants, Cooper and the Anchor Mill Company, each own lots on the east side of the river, on which their mills are situated; Cooper’s being furthest north, or up stream, and the mill company’s furthest south, or down stream. "It further appears that the share of water owned by Cooper or the mill company is not sufficient to run either of their mills, and for tíiany years they have been using largely of the water belonging to appellants. The dam and bulkheads have been standing for many years, and the mills are all old. The rise and fall of the water in the Cedar river is quite variable, the volume ranging from six hundred and forty to one thousand two hundred and eighty cubic feet per second. The referees first appointed found, among other things, that partition of the property in kind was “not practically possible, without an indefinitely continuing intelligent operation and supervision of the appliances that might be erected, conducted, morover, in a judicial [451]*451spirit.” The referees last appointed made practically the same finding, for they recommended the appointment of a superintendent or inspector to control the apparatus, and measure out to each owner his share of the water. We may now proceed to a consideration of the various questions presented by the record. It is to be observed that the appellants do not question that partition of a water power may be had in a proper case.

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Bluebook (online)
33 L.R.A. 61, 98 Iowa 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-cooper-iowa-1896.