Lindsay & Phelps Co. v. Mullen

176 U.S. 126, 20 S. Ct. 325, 44 L. Ed. 400, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1727
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 22, 1900
Docket44
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 176 U.S. 126 (Lindsay & Phelps Co. v. Mullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay & Phelps Co. v. Mullen, 176 U.S. 126, 20 S. Ct. 325, 44 L. Ed. 400, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1727 (1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after stating *the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Upon the foregoing facts the plaintiff contends: First. That' the boom at the West Newton Slough, through which the logs scaled by the defendant Mullen passed was not “ any boom . . . chartered by law ” within the scope of section 2400 of the Statutes of 1894. This contention cannot be sustained. The words chartered by law ” are not to be understood as referring simply to' corporations incorporated' under special acts. A corporation which is organized under a general law is as much “ chartered by law ” as one whose organization is provided for by special act. So that on the face of this *137 statute, and giving to its words their-natural meaning, it includes every corporation, whether incorporated under general or special law, with authority to maintain a boom. The mere fact that in early times four special charters were granted to boom companies cannot work any limitation upon the meaning of the words used in this statute. If the legislature of Minnesota had purposed any such distinction, its language would have been more apt. It would not have used words broad enough to have included any corporation of the kind described.

As a matter of fact, this corporation was organized some eighteen days before chapter 221. of the Laws of 1889 was passed. '. Prior to that time there was an act (General Statute Minnesota, 1866, chap. 34, sec. 1, as amended by chap. 13, Laws Minnesota, 1873) which authorized the formation of corporations for various purposes named, and also “other lawful business.” Under that statute this corporation was formed. That the business of booming logs on the waters of streams running through .the forests of the West is a lawful. business cannot be doubted.

In City of Erie v. Canfield, 27 Michigan, 479, 482, the Supreme Court of Michigan said:

“ It is clear that on a river like the Manistee,- which is navi- i gable by steamers for a long distance, but down, which logs, by the million are floated and gathered in booms every season — where in fact the' principal industry ■ consists in’cutting, floating and manufacturing into lumber the forests in its vicinity, and where the river is more valuable for this floatage than for any other navigation; the necessity and. convenience of this floatage must be considered in any rules laid down for _ the public use of the stream, and the need of booming facilities to render the floatage of value. Indeed, to take away the privilege of booming would be to strike a fatal blow at the principal commerce on-the stream; for the vessels which ply between Manistee and other ports are loaded principally with the lumber which 4he mills along the shores of Manistee lake and river are enabled, by means of the privilege of- floating and booming logs upon these waters, to manufacture and place *138 upon the market. It is just.and reasonable, therefore, and conducive to the best interests of commerce, that the right of navigating the river should be exercised with due regard to the necessity for booming facilities, and the former is not so far paramount, as to render the latter a nuisance whenever and wherever it encroaches upon waters navigable by the large vessels which enter this stream.”

And in Pound v. Turck, 95 U. S. 459, 464, is a clear recognition of the,lawfulness of this booming industry, as' appears from the following quotation :

‘-‘.There are.within the State of Wisconsin, and perhaps-other States, many small streams navigable for a short dis-. tance from, their mouths in one of the great rivers of the country, by steamboats, but whose greatest value in.water carriage is as outlets to sawed lógs, sawed lumber, coal, salt, etc. In order to ■ develop their greatest utility in' that regard, it is often essential that such structures as dams, booms, piers, etc., should be used, which are substantial obstfuctions to general navigation, and more or less so to rafts and barges. But to the legislature of the • State may be -most appropriately confided the authority to authorize these structures where their use will do more good than harm, and to impose such regulations and limitations in their construction and use as will best -reconcile and accoinmodate the interest of all concerned in the matter.”

Indeed, it would strike a serious blow at the legislation of many of the Northwestern States and an immense volume of business that has been carried on under the authority of that legislation, to hold that the booming of logs was not a lawful business.

That those words, “ other lawful business,” as found in the statute are not to be-narrowly construed, but are broad enough -to include an Incorporation for this purpose, is made clear by the decision of the- Supreme Court of Minnesota in Brown v. Corbin, 40 Minnesota, 508, 509, in which .the court said :

“ Defendants ilivoke the rule that when particular words are followed by general ones, the general, words are restricted in meaning to objects of the kind particularly enumerated, *139 and therefore.that the phrase ‘ or other lawful business’ must be limited to a business of the same kind as those. previously-enumerated. We think the rule invoked is not applicable, at least in the narrow and restricted sense, in which defendants seek tó apply it. The kinds of business specifically enumerated bear no common analogy to each other except that they are all for pecuniary profit, and of a strictly private character as distinguished from those to be carried on by quasi public. corporations authorized to exercise the right of eminent domain. Evidently the expression ‘or other lawful business’ was added as a sort of catch-all, for the purpose of including any kind of business for pecuniary profit not elsewhere provided for, and which might- have been omitted from the previous particular enumeration.”

. The corporation then having a legal existence at the time the act of 1889 was passed, section 3 of the act expressly pro-' vided that it should apply to corporations previously organized for the purposes specified in section 2. In other words, all the rights, privileges and powers conferred by the act of 1889 were by this section given to existing corporations. So that we have the case of a corporation, organized under the general law of the State, given by subsequent statute full powers in reference to the maintenance of a boom, and in fact maintaining a boom; and the case therefore comes \yithin the specific description in section 2400 of a boom chartered by law.

Further than that, the legislature of Minnesota accepted the claim of the surveyor Mullen as valid under its laws, and thus impliedly recognized the boom company, involved in this ebntroversy, as one chartered ’by law within the scope of the statutes providing for inspection, scaling and charges therefor.

.The second contention is that the statutes of Minnesota were not intended to and do not in fact give the surveyor general any lien upon the logs of private parties for inspecting and scaling logs’ run through chartered booms.

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Bluebook (online)
176 U.S. 126, 20 S. Ct. 325, 44 L. Ed. 400, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-phelps-co-v-mullen-scotus-1900.