Case v. Hoffman

20 L.R.A. 40, 54 N.W. 793, 84 Wis. 438, 1893 Wisc. LEXIS 79
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 20 L.R.A. 40 (Case v. Hoffman) 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
Case v. Hoffman, 20 L.R.A. 40, 54 N.W. 793, 84 Wis. 438, 1893 Wisc. LEXIS 79 (Wis. 1893).

Opinion

OetoN, J.

This is an appeal from the order of the circuit court sustaining a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state a cause of action. The facts stated in the complaint are substantially as follows:

The plaintiff is the owner of 440 acres of land in sections 21 and 22, town-20, range 1 E., purchased and suitable for the cultivation of cranberries. “ There is a natural stream of water known as Beaver Greek,’ with clearly-defined banks and a fixed channel, varying in depth, but always with ■ a steady flow of the waters in an easterly direction, bearing south, through the northern portion of [441]*441said town 20, at a distance of about two miles from the plaintiff’s said lands, and, after passing the eastern line of the town, bends its course so as to flow in a southerly and southwesterly direction for a considerable distance below the south line of said town. There were always and still are in the northwestern portion of said town living springs, which continuously flow and discharge their waters by a well-defined stream into a natural lake of about sixty acres in extent, situated in section 8 of said town, known as Big Lake.’ From said lake the waters so gathered flowed, under natural conditions, upon the surface and beneath the surface of the lands lying to the southeast of said lake to and across the said lands of the plaintiff, and thence easterly, until they discharged themselves and were again collected in said Beaver Creek. The said natural flow or stream of water from said lake in section 8 was well defined and established, and in places, one of which was upon the land of the plaintiff, had made for itself a distinct and plainly marked channel, pointing and showing the natural flow of the water; and said stream was known and called by the name of the ‘ West Branch ’ of Beaver Creek. At the time of the purchase by the plaintiff of his said lands in section 22, the actual flow and source of the water above described from said Big Lake still continued as in a state of nature across the lands of the plaintiff as aforesaid, discharging to and upon the lands lying to the east of the plaintiff, and to some extent to the south of the lands of the plaintiff, and were to a considerable extent dispersed over a large area of land drained by Beaver creek. The plaintiff’s lands were also supplied with water from surface springs, northward therefrom, in large numbers, constant in their supply, furnishing a large quantity of living water, moving in a southeasterly direction through and across the lands lying between said springs and plaintiff’s land, and over, through, and across said lands, though not usually in [442]*442perfectly defined channels. At the time of the purchase .of said lands in section 22 by the plaintiff as aforesaid, immemorially theretofore, and thereafter continuously until about the year 1883, the waters of said West Branch, together with the other waters last aforesaid, were sufficient in volume adequately to irrigate and supply waters sufficient to moisten said lands and make them suitable to the cultivation of cranberries.” Immediately after the purchase of the lands in section 22, the plaintiff began the cultivation of cranberries on said land, and cut ditches across the same to make available the natural flow of said waters, and has continued to improve said lands for such purpose by an expenditure of a large sum of money; and the improvements so made are of the value of $12,000, and the lands, with said improvements, are now of the value of $20,000.

The complaint then states, in substance, as follows: About 1883, D. A. and C. A. Goodyear built a sawmill about a mile south of plaintiff’s land, and for the purpose of getting logs from near said Big Lake to their mill, they obtained 'an act of the legislature (ch. 271, Laws of 1883), and claimed to act in accordance with the same, and made a ditch or canal from six to twelve feet wide, and four feet' deep, from Big Lake along the general course of the West Branch aforesaid, down through a portion of the plaintiff’s lands, a,nd to said sawmill, and floated logs to said mill; but they so conducted their business and managed their ditch as to greatly injure the lands of the plaintiff and others. They then entered into a contract with the plaintiff to make such ditches on his land with supply gates, so that he could make the same use of the waters of said West Branch as before said large ditch was made. The cutting of this ditch not only used all the waters of said West Branch along their natural channel and bed, but diverted the same as it left the plaintiff’s land into another direction [443]*443to said mill, and southeastwardly to a stream called “Silver Creek,” a long distance from Beaver Creek, into which it formerly ran and was a tributary thereof. A branch ditch was also cut into Beaver Creek northwardly, which diverted a portion of its waters also to the said mill and into Silver Creek. The plaintiff continued to enjoy the advantages of said contract until the said mill and the floating of logs to it through said big ditch were abandoned, and the Good-years sold out all their interest in the same to the defendants in 1889. The defendants then closed up the plaintiff’s gates by which he was wont to obtain sufficient water for his cranberry culture, and cut ditches from the main ditch outside of plaintiff’s lands and around the same, and diverted all the water of said West Branch and of said main ditch around and away from the same to said mill and Silver Creek, and thereby nearly destroyed the use of the lands and improvements of the plaintiff. But some water escaped through the east banks out of repair and beneath the broken gates, which he used to irrigate his lands to a limited extent. The defendants then constructed ditches, dams, and embankments, solely for the purpose of removing and diverting said watercourse wholly from and off the plaintiff’s lands,1 intending thereby to déprive the plaintiff from receiving a supply of living water from any source whatever for his lands. The plaintiff’s cranberry crop is now liable to destruction from the want of water.

The plaintiff prays that his rights may be established to said water; that the Goodyear contract be specifically performed; that the defendants be enjoined from diverting said waters, and be required to remove said obstructions to the natural flow thereof; and that the plaintiff be permitted by the order of the court to cut through said dam and allow the waters to pass through the plaintiff’s land; and, finally, for damages of $3,500, and for other relief.

The principal contention of the learned counsel of the [444]*444respondents in support of tbe demurrer is that the waters coming to the plaintiff’s lands, and for the diversion of which the plaintiff complains, are mere surface waters, which the defendants had their right to deal with on their own land and for their own benefit as they saw fit, and that their alleged diversion thereof from the plaintiff’s lands does not give him any right of action therefor. The learned counsel of the appellant contend that such waters are of a natural watercourse and living stream, in which he has the rights of a riparian proprietor, and that therefore he has in this action the right to recover for the diversion, thereof by the defendants.

The distinction between mere surface waters and a natural watercourse is wide enough to be readily discerned, and to determine which the complaint describes is not difficult.

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Bluebook (online)
20 L.R.A. 40, 54 N.W. 793, 84 Wis. 438, 1893 Wisc. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-hoffman-wis-1893.