Cline v. Goodale

31 P. 956, 23 Or. 406, 1893 Ore. LEXIS 37
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 31 P. 956 (Cline v. Goodale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cline v. Goodale, 31 P. 956, 23 Or. 406, 1893 Ore. LEXIS 37 (Or. 1893).

Opinion

Moore, J.

(after stating the facts). — A general summary of the evidence taken shows the following: The testimony of the plaintiff tended to show that he asked defendant before the contract was executed about his water rights at the mill, and that defendant told him he had the right and could maintain the dam as he wished; that it could be raised higher if necessary; that the dam, race, and lagoon had been used for that purpose for more than twenty years, and that such use gave a right to continue the same; that he went to the property with defendant’s agent for the purpose of examining the same with a view of buying, and defendant requested him to say nothing of his intended purchase, and that in consequence of such request he made no inquiry of any one at Coburg or elsewhere in relation to defendant’s water rights and privileges at the mill; that defendant was not present when he made the examination of the property, and that he did not again look at it till the contract had been executed; that at that time the water [410]*410was pouring over the wasteway of the dam in a volume fifty feet wide and three feet deep; that he told defendant that he considered the mill of but little value, but that it was an excellent water power; that he understood from the defendant that be had an indefeasible right to maintain the dam and water privileges; that the defendant represented that the mill would cut from twenty thousand to twenty-two thousand feet of lumber per day, and that he had cleared ten thousand dollars a year out of it; that defendant had lowered the dam about thirty-four inches, and that from June 1st to September 20th he failed to restore it as it was at the time he contracted to buy the property; that about ten feet above the timber at the foot of the dam the brush and gravel stood from ten to twelve inches higher than the timbers of the dam where the water fell over, and that defendant first removed this brush and gravel, and then, finding that it did not lower the dam sufficiently, he cut out two ten-inch timbers, placed one on top of the other with a space of about three inches between them; that plaintiff told defendant at the time the dam was lowered that he objected to such lowering, and that defendant promised and agreed to put the dam back as it had been; that the effect of lowering the dam has been to render the property nearly worthless; that the power of the sawmill has been cut down one-half, so that it will not now cut more than twelve thousand feet per day, and in consequence the mill will not now pay running expenses; that by lowering the water it has decreased the boomage facilities so that it requires four extra men to get the logs to the mill.

The testimony of the plaintiff in relation to the statements of the defendant that he intended to replace the dam, is corroborated by the testimony of George W. Murch, who, at the request of defendant, tried to purchase five or seven acres of land from J. J. Thomas; and that the defendant told Mr. Murch if he could not get better power he would be obliged to abandon his mill property. Mr. Thomas testified that Mr. Murch and Mr. [411]*411Delaney, at the request of defendant, tried to purchase this land from him for defendant. T. H. Blum testified that the dam has been lowered from one and one-half to two feet; that he has seen the dam since it was lowered, but he could not say exactly how much it had been cut down. S. H. Thomas testified for plaintiff that he thought the dam had been cut down about eight inches ; that he requested the defendant before he ever heard of the plaintiff, to lower the dam, and that the defendant promised to do so, if he had to use steam power. F. A. Getchell, another witness for plaintiff, testified that he should judge that the dam was about two feet lower than it was in May; and then again, in almost the same breath, he says the dam has been lowered a good three feet since May, that the power in consequence has been cut down one-half, and that the mill had to be closed down in order to get logs to it.

The defendant testified that prior to the time the contract was made, he told the plaintiff the dam was about six inches higher than he had a right to maintain it, and that if the Thomases, who had been complaining, insisted upon it, the dam must come down about that much; that on two occasions prior to the execution of the contract, he told the plaintiff that the dam was about five or six inches higher than he had a right to maintain it; that the dam was lowered just six inches, and no more, by taking off a timber six by eight inches lying down flatways; that some brush and gravel had been removed from above the foot of the dam, but that this gravel and brush was not as high as the dam; that after this timber had been taken off he had placed boards on the dam, which retained the same amount of water it had originally held; that there were no ten by ten-inch timbers in the dam in March, at the time the contract was made; that the dam could not be lowered three feet from what it was at that time, for the reason that the dam was not that high in March. The defendant's testimony in relation to the statements made to plaintiff about lowering the dam, is corroborated [412]*412by the testimony of the defendant’s wife, who testified that she was present at a meeting of the plaintiff and defendant at their home in Eugene, and heard her husband tell plaintiff that the dam was higher than he had a right to maintain it; that the Thomases were objecting to the height of the dam, and that he might be obliged to lower it; that E. J. Frazier was present at the time, but at that moment he was playing the piano. Mr. Frazier, in his testimony, denies that anything was said at that time about the dam, but he admits that he was playing the piano. '

The testimony of the plaintiff is contradicted by that of J. J. Phipps, who says that he measured the depth of water on the gravel above the timbers of the dam and also measured the depth of the water on the timbers, and that the water was deeper on the gravel than on the timbers; that the gravel and brush could not be kept higher than the timber in such a current of water as flowed over the dam, and that taking off the brush and gravel did not lower the dam nor the water; that the timber taken off was six by eight inches lying down flat-ways ; that two pieces were taken off, one twelve feet and the other sixteen feet long, placed end to end, and pinned down on the dam; that in July or August, the water was so low in the river that it did not fill the pond, and that he walked across the gravel on the dam and that there was no water running over the gravel; that the boards placed on the top of the dam raised the water as high as the dam did before it was lowered. ■ George Snyder, who had charge of the headgate in the dam for two years, testified that the low water was caused by logs getting jammed in the race and thus preventing the water from coming into it, and that there was not enough water to fill the millpond; that the sawdust carriers and blower take off one-fourth of the power, and that the dam was lowered six inches. R. W. Beeson, the log hauler at the mill, testified that logs were in the race and prevented the water from reaching the mill from July [413]*4139 th to September, and that the dam was lowered six inches and then held all the water that came; that the boards placed on the dam raise the water as high as it did before the dam was lowered; and that the gravel would have to be lower than the timbers of the dam. W. M. Bogart testified that the timber was higher than the gravel in March.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P. 956, 23 Or. 406, 1893 Ore. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cline-v-goodale-or-1893.