McDonell v. Rifle Boom Co.

38 N.W. 681, 71 Mich. 61, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 575
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 N.W. 681 (McDonell v. Rifle Boom Co.) 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
McDonell v. Rifle Boom Co., 38 N.W. 681, 71 Mich. 61, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 575 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Tbe plaintiff is owner of 40 acres of land upon tbe Rifle river, and about 12 miles up tbe stream from its mouth. Sbe purchased this land for farming-[62]*62purposes, in 1873, and has since owned and up to 1884 been in actual occupation of the same.

The defendant is a corporation organized under the laws •of this State, and operating upon the Riñe river, running and booming logs.

Plaintiff sues for damages sustained, as she claims, in the years 1876, '77, -'78, '79, '80, and '81, by the overflow •of her lands by water caused by the operations of the •defendant in running and driving logs down said river. In the circuit court for the county of Arenac she recovered a verdict for $635, and judgment was entered upon the same. The defendant brings error. Its complaint is directed entirely against the charge of the court.

There does not seem to have been, on the trial, any very serious dispute as to the damage done plaintiff by the running of logs upon the river in all, or at least some, of these years. The main controversy turned upon the question, who was responsible for it? The defendant •did not run or drive these logs directly by its own employ és, but the same was done under contract; and it •claims that the control of the river, the dams upon it, and,the logs while they were being run or driven each year, was by the defendant turned over to the contractor or contractors. The defendant contends that it did not direct or control the mode in which the river should be driven by the contractors, and exercised no control over them or the men in their employ relative to the driving •of the logs in the river or the management of the dams thereon, and that, consequently, it was not responsible for the action of said contractors or their employés.

There is a small stream called the “Dead Branch,” running through plaintiff’s land, and emptying into the Rifle river. The boom company controls the Rifle for from 60 to 80 miles above its mouth. It owns two upper dams on the river, and leases what is known as the [63]*63-“ Lower Dam,” which is located some three or four miles «hove the plaintiff’s premises. The company runs out of the river each year from 60 to T10 million feet of logs. These dams are used to collect and hold the water until ■such times as they choose to let it out and flood the stream for the purposes of floating. It is claimed that the lower dam is also used for sorting purposes, and that, ■every time the water is let out of this dam for either ■driving or sorting purposes, the Rifle is raised so high that the water backs up the Dead Branch, and overflows the lands of the plaintiff..

At the mouth of the river the company maintained a large boom, and it has driven piles in the stream 40 or 50 rods from its mouth across the full width of it, leaving a small space or channel in the center. Seventy or •eighty rods above -this first row of piles is another, driven in the same manner, and eighty rods above this another lot of piles are driven in the center of the stream, called '“Jam Piles.” Boom sticks are stretched across the spaces left in the river, which boom sticks are fastened to piles driven in the river or on the shore, completely obstructing the river when desired. The company constructed dredge cuts on either side’ of the river near its mouth, small cuts, 25 or 30 feet wide, dredged out from the river, and leading into Saginaw bay. These cuts are used for sorting purposes. The company stops, stores, and sorts in the river all logs. The logs are stopped at the jam piles as they come down the stream, by means of the boom sticks stretched from such piles to the shore, and the logs are held in the stream until sorted and passed through the dredge cuts to the bay.

It is admitted- that these logs cannot he sorted successr -fully in this manner without keeping, during the driving season, a jam in some portion of the river all the time. Logs cannot be sorted without stopping them, and [64]*64the business cannot be done without creating a jam in the river, and this jam must necessarily be above the sorting ground. It is claimed that this jam would often be several miles in length up the stream, causing the water to be more or less obstructed in its flow, and setting it. back up into the Dead Branch, overflowing plaintiff’s land.. The injuries resulted from this cause and the letting off water from the lower dam, as heretofore stated.

The contracts of the boom company with the persons who were to drive the logs provided that they should drive and deliver to the company,—

“To solid jam at or below the prairie, so called, about two and one-half miles above the mouth of said river, being the first bend below the point where the telegraph line strikes the bank of said river. * * * No logs shall be left from the forks down, either in the stream or on the banks, and the logs are to be driven in below said bend in the prairie as fast as space is made therefor by the removal of logs below by said company; and said first party [the contractor] shall not at any time suffer any space next below said bend in the prairie to remain unfilled with logs for more than twelve hours until the whole of said logs shall be delivered below said point.”

It will thus be seen that the contractors were required by the boom company to keep during the driving season, and until the whole of the logs were run down, a jam of logs two and one-half miles above the mouth of the river, so as to keep the space below and between said jam and the sorting grounds filled with logs as fast as the company wanted to use them.

The court below charged the jury in substance that if, in order to fulfill this contract or contracts, which were all substantially alike, it was necessary that such quantities of logs should be kept below the lower dam as would cause a solid.jam of several .miles in length, and by so-doing the water was backed -upon plaintiff’s land, the-defendant was liable. ■ •

[65]*65This proposition was correct; and it needs no argument to sustain it. The defendant had exclusive control and management of this river, in the first place, and if, in turning over its control to a contractor, it burdened such contractor with conditions which, if complied with, necessarily caused damage to plaintiff, it became responsible for such damage. The question was left to the jury to say whether or not this contract could have been performed by the contractor without damage to the plaintiff, and they were instructed that, if they found it could have been so performed, then the contractor, and not the company, would be liable for the injuries done plaintiff.

The jury were also instructed as to the letting out of water from the lower dam, and the injuries resulting therefrom. They were told, in effect, as in relation to the jams, that if it was necessary, in order to fulfill their contract with the company, to so flo-'d the river as to damage plaintiff, then the company must settle for such damage; but if it was not necessary, the contractor must be the one to recompense the plaintiff. These instructions were in accordance with the well-settled general principles of the law as applied to contractors, and were as favorable to the defendant as it could ask.

If, in order to properly and reasonably perform these contracts, the provisions of which were dictated by the company, who, previous to the making of the same, had full control and management of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.W. 681, 71 Mich. 61, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonell-v-rifle-boom-co-mich-1888.