Janesville Cotton Mills v. Ford

17 L.R.A. 564, 52 N.W. 764, 82 Wis. 416, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 179
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 L.R.A. 564 (Janesville Cotton Mills v. Ford) 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
Janesville Cotton Mills v. Ford, 17 L.R.A. 564, 52 N.W. 764, 82 Wis. 416, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 179 (Wis. 1892).

Opinion

Winslow, J.

The trial of this case was very long. The record before us contains nearly one thousand printed pages. We have carefully examined it, and are satisfied that the findings of the circuit judge upon those questions in the case which are purely questions of fact are amply sustained by the evidence. We shall not discuss them at length. This general statement of our conclusions must suffice.

[423]*423The legal questions at issue are neither numerous nor difficult of statement. Without attempting to quote the language of the findings and judgment in full, it may be briefly stated that the circuit court adjudged, -first, that the term “ square inch of water,” as used in the conveyances in evidence, means “ a volume or stream of water one inch square in cross-section area measured at right angles with the line of its flow, and flowing with the velocity due to the given head; ” second, that the reserved or “ Rig Mill ” water amounted to 3,200 square inches and no more; third, that the several owners of the perpetual use of water have become the sole owners as tenants in common of the dam, canal, and water-power, and all the rights appertaining thereto in the proportion which the number of square inches owned by each bears to 13,532 square inches; fourth, that all the water furnished by the dam has been sold, and that there is no excess over and above the 13,532 square inches which has been sold in parcels. All these findings are challenged by the appellants, Ford and Grossett, who claim that the reserved or “ Big Mill ” water exceeds 3,200 square inches, and that there is an excess of water furnished by the dam over and above 13,532 square inches at a four-foot head, and that they are the owners of a part of each surplus. These contentions will be considered in the order above indicated.

I. As to the meaning of the term “ square inch of water ” It is apparent that the term does not, in the ordinary and usual sense of the words used, convey to the mind any idea of volume. In order to determine what it means it must receive a construction, and the question is, What is the construction or meaning which must be given to it? On behalf of respondents it is claimed, and the circuit court seems to have followed that view,'that the term “square inch of water ” had a definite technical meaning among water engineers and practical mill-men from a time ante[424]*424rior to the making of the first conveyance, and that such meaning was the one found by the court, namely, a stream of water with a cross-section area of one square inch, moving with the velocity due to the given head. On the other hand, it is claimed by appellants that the term had no such definite technical meaning at any time, certainly not in the early days of the water-power in question, and that the meaning of the term as here used must be sought for and found by considering the circumstances and facts surround7 ing the various grants and the evidence of the parties as to the meaning intended by the term, and that in the light of such facts and evidence of intention it must be held that the term means the amount of water which will be discharged through an aperture in a flume of the given number of square inches, the center of which aperture is at the given distance below the surface of the water in the flume. For convenience we will call the first the “ theoretical inch; ” the second, the “ practical inch.”

It appears from the testimony of the experts that there is a considerable difference between the theoretical and the practical inch. The theoretical inch is certain and unvarying.in amount; the practical inch varies in amount according to the construction of the aperture. The practical inch discharged through an aperture with thin edges will measure about sixty-two per cent, in volume of the theoretical inch, but if the aperture be trumpet-shaped, or furnished with proper adjutage inside the reservoir, it may be made to equal the theoretical inch, and even to discharge as much as 240 per cent, of the theoretical inch. The theoretical inch is founded upon a theory, namely, the theory that •water spouting from the side of a flume with a certain head, say four feet, will have the same velocity as if it fell the same distance through the air, and, as this velocity is fixed and certain, the amount of water referred to in the theoretical. inch is fixed and certain. This theory is not [425]*425true in actual practice, for it appears, as has been stated, that the actual discharge through an aperture with thin edges and without adjutage is hut sixty-two per cent, of the theoretical discharge; the reason being that by the crowding together of particles of water coming towards the hole from all directions the flow is retarded, and the stream does not attain its theoretical velocity until it is a short distance outside of the hole where the cross-section area becomes contracted. It is a matter of considerable importance, therefore, which of these meanings is to be applied to the term “ square inch,” as used in the deeds under consideration.

It needs no authority to show that if the term had a fixed and definite meaning among hydraulic engineers and mill-men at the time it was used, such meaning would prevail, notwithstanding the fact that people ordinarily did not know of such meaning, or even that the parties to the deeds themselves did not know of it. Parties cannot use technical terms with a fixed meaning, and then disclaim such meaning. It is equally clear to our minds that when such alleged technical or trade meaning is an arbitrary one, and not a meaning which the word or words would naturally import, it must clearly appear that the acquired or technical meaning was not the subject of dispute or doubt; that it was well settled and understood, at least among members of the profession or trade which is supposed to use the term in such technical sense. It would relieve us of some labor if we were able to say that the testimony here shows that the term “ square inch of water” had acquired the technical meaning embodied in the definition of the theoretical inch at the time of the making of the early deeds upon this water-power, but we are not able to say so. It is true, there are several water engineers who testify that the theoretical inch has become the accepted meaning of the term “ inch of water,” [426]*426but they do not attempt to tell when such meaning became prevalent. There were also some pamphlets called “ wheel books,” which are advertisements issued by makers of water-wheels, which give the technical definition claimed by respondents; but these have all been issued within a few years last past. There was other evidence upon the same side, but, on the other hand, there was much evidence of .practical millwrights, and at least one water engineer, to the effect that such meaning has never obtained or come into general use. The entire testimony on this point forces' upon our minds the conviction that there was not in 1850, or even in 1860, a fixed technical meaning attached to the words such as respondents claim. This impression is strengthened when- we consider a number of decisions in this and other courts where grants of inches of water have been made and defined or explained in the grant by reference to an aperture. Blanchard v. Doering, 21 Wis. 477; Norris v. Showerman, 2 Doug. 16; Schuylkill Nav. Co. v. Moore, 2 Whart. 477. Did the question relate solely to deeds executed within the last decade, the respondents’ argument would be much stronger.

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Bluebook (online)
17 L.R.A. 564, 52 N.W. 764, 82 Wis. 416, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janesville-cotton-mills-v-ford-wis-1892.