Kraft v. Miller

22 N.W.2d 857, 314 Mich. 390, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 417
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1946
DocketDocket No. 21, Calendar No. 43,050.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 N.W.2d 857 (Kraft v. Miller) 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
Kraft v. Miller, 22 N.W.2d 857, 314 Mich. 390, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 417 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

Plaintiffs Kraft, husband and wife, are the owners of two farm properties located on the Grand river in the township of Onondaga, Ingham county. One of the properties, known as the “small” farm, is located on the east side of the Grand river, contiguous to the Kinneyville grist mill dam property. The other, consisting of about 218 acres, known as the “large” farm, is located on the west side of the river about one-half mile upstream from the small farm.

*393 Defendants George F. Miller, Charles D. Miller, and D. G. Miller are the owners of property located six miles down the river in Eaton county and on which is located the Smithville dam, which has been there for more than 50 years. When defendants acquired this property in 1936 they constructed a power house at the Smithville dam, which has since been remodeled from time to time. They have expended in excess of $50,000 thereon, and are now furnishing electricity to approximately 200 customers.

Plaintiffs acquired their title to both their properties by warranty deeds from Elizabeth C. Wilkinson on February 2, 1937. Neither deed makes any mention of reservations of water or flowage rights. Plaintiffs’ grantor acquired both farms by inheritance from her mother in 1907, the property having been in the family, according to the abstracts, for over 30 years. The small farm at one time consisted of two contiguous parcels, one of 23 acres, and the other of 5 acres. The 5-acre parcel abuts the river and is the parcel near which the Kinneyville dam was located. This parcel was acquired by Elizabeth Wilkinson in 1915 from the heirs of Lester P. Francis, who acquired the same in 1892. In 1919 she conveyed any water rights appurtenant to the 5-acre parcel to Frank EL Sanders, whose widow in 1942 conveyed such rights to defendants. This 5-acre parcel was owned at one time by Stephan Kinney, who in 1848 obtained from the legislature, by a local act, the right to erect a dam on the Grand River. This act provided that this dam “shall not exceed eight feet above common low-water mark. ’ ’ Kinney was required to maintain a chute for the passage of boats and was prohibited from entering upon or flowing land of other persons without their consent.

*394 After the purchase of the Smithville dam property by defendants, they acquired all the flowage rights up to 12 feet of water to the Kinneyville dam property, with the exception of plaintiffs’ “small” farm. The crest of the Smithville dam at the time of defendants’ purchase was 879.08 feet above sea level, and 9.08 feet in height. The Kinneyville dam has not been operated since its destruction about 1890, and is presently merely a drop in the river, where there are old timbers and loose stones.

Plaintiffs in their bill of complaint filed November 19, 1943, charged that defendants, in disregard of plaintiffs’ rights to have a continuous flow of water through and along their lands in its accustomed channel and natural volume, added temporary planking to their Smithville dam to a point approximately 3% feet over and above the top of the permanent dam, and that for three years preceding the filing of their bill of complaint plaintiffs’ land has been flooded and been made untillable by the raising of the water level in the river and causing it to back up and seep into their property. They aver that defendants and their agents started to remove this temporary planking for the purpose of permanently raising the top of the dam so that it would be built up to a point 5% feet over and above its settled level. They charge that defendants’ acts have caused a flooding of about 60 acres of plaintiffs ’ tillable land and caused approximately 25 more acres to become unfit for cultivation, and another 100 acres unusable for pasturage. Believing that they would thus suffer irreparable- damage, they sought injunctive relief.

Defendants in their answer deny that they have changed the course or the volume of the flow of water and aver that any damage suffered by plain *395 tiffs was due to excessive rainfall from time to time. They admit that they propose to repair, improve, and rebuild their dam in order to render its power more efficient, and to greatly reduce the danger at flood time; that they intend to replace the two feet of planking with concrete construction, but that such alteration will not raise the water in the Grand river higher than their legal right to do so. They state that the construction proposed will cost about $35,000, and that all of it is necessary to protect their hydroelectric plant. They charge that any delay in the prosecution of this work will cause them great financial loss, and may cause the entire destruction, or great damage to the dam and plant. They also seek to maintain their flowage rights in the Kinneyville dam property, by reason of the conveyance to their grantor in 1915, but they deny any intention to either reconstruct or maintain the Kinneyville dam at a greater height than that provided in the special act of the legislature, and by their conveyance.

In reply to defendants’ answer, plaintiffs aver that any flowage rights arising out of the special act or defendants’ deed have long since been extinguished by abandonment a'nd nonuser. They take the position that, since there has not been any dam at Kinneyville since 1890, defendants have no right whatever to flow their premises.

The record contains the testimony of engineers who examined the properties and ran levels on the height of the water at Smithville and up the river to Kinneyville. There is also the testimony of nonexperts who have lived in the neighborhood for years and have had opportunity to know the waters from year to year.

The trial judge, at the request of counsel, viewed' the properties in question on. January 13th, prior to *396 the trial, and stated in his written opinion that he observed at that time:

“That so far as the small farm was concerned the water at that point was well below the banks thereof and the lagoons referred to by Dr. Kraft were dry, which of course, was at a time when no dashboards were up at the Smithville Dam. The land on the large farm generally sloped toward the river and the woods were damp and had many frozen small ponds thereon.”

In this opinion he reviewed the history of the title to the various properties and the claims of plaintiffs and defendants. He held, as a matter of law, that the easement of flowage incident to the Kinney-ville dam property had been extinguished by abandonment, and, therefore, defendants had lost any right that might have existed to raise the water level above the old Kinneyville dam site, by reason of any water rights incident to their ownership.

From the conflicting testimony he accepted that of Walter E. Zimmer, a'civil engineer of 34 years’ experience, based upon his findings from levels run beginning at a United States G-eological Survey bench mark at Eaton Rapids, which was 873.52 feet above sea level, from which it was determined that the elevation at the top of the concrete of the Smith-ville dam was 879.08 feet above sea level.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.W.2d 857, 314 Mich. 390, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraft-v-miller-mich-1946.