Newaygo Manufacturing Co. v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway Co.

30 N.W. 910, 64 Mich. 114, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 676
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 N.W. 910 (Newaygo Manufacturing Co. v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway 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
Newaygo Manufacturing Co. v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway Co., 30 N.W. 910, 64 Mich. 114, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 676 (Mich. 1887).

Opinions

Sherwood, J.

On the first day of April, 1873, the Newaygo Company, then a copartnership, owned blocks A and B, in the village of Newaygo, and the. canal and water-power thereon, formed by damming the Muskegon river at that point. The Newaygo Company and its assigns, at that time and ever since, have been using the water-power for the manufacture of lumber and for other purposes, the waterpower being one of the largest in the State, and the company owning it has done a constantly increasing business.

At the time mentioned, the Grand Bapids, Newaygo & Lake Shore Bailroad was in operation to the village of Newaygo, and the railroad company, desiring to extend its road to the village of White Cloud, and the route selected passing over blocks A and B belonging to the Newaygo Company, they, for a nominal sum, sold and conveyed to the railroad company a right of way across said blocks for the use of its railroad. The deed is dated the first day of April, 1873. That portion of the deed needing special consideration in the case is the description and reservation, reading as follows:

“A right of way in and over a certain strip of land situate, lying, and being in the village and county of Newaygo, Michigan, and designated as a strip of land out of block * A/ in said village, 60 feet wide, and lying 30 feet in width [118]*118upon each side of, and at right angles with, the center line of said company’s railroad, as staked out by John Manly,, engineer, over said block ‘ A,’ and commencing at a point, on the southern boundary of said block ‘A,’ 35 feet east of the range line between townships twelve (12) north, range twelve (12) west, and twelve (12) north, of range thirteen (13) west, in said county, and running thence northerly, on a curve of 717 feet radius, to the bank of the Muskegon river.
That portion of said land lying between the river and the mill-race, over which said track passes, is reserved for the free and uninterrupted use of said Newaygo Company, their-heirs or assigns, forever.
The meaning is that the road shall have the privilege to-build a bridge, or approach to a bridge, over the portion of said land above reserved, at such an elevation as not to interfere with the usual business of the said Newaygo Company. Said railroad company to have the right, at any time, to use the ground here reserved for the purpose of constructing said bridge, or approach thereto, or at any time to repair and maintain said bridge, approach, and railroad.
“ For the said party of the second part, and their assigns and their servants and agents, to build, construct, and maintain a railroad in and over said strip of land, and at all times freely to pass and repass by themselves, their servants, agents, and employés, with their engines, cars, horses, cattle, carts, wagons, and other vehicles, and to transport freight and passengers, and to do all other things properly connected with or incident to the location, building, maintaining, and running of the said road, and to use the earth and other materials within said strip of land for that purpose.”

On taking possession of the Tight of way thus granted, the railroad company constructed its road over said block A, and built a bridge over the canal for its track, keeping within the limitations of the deed; and the complainant’s bill of complaint alleges that the Grand Rapids, Newaygo & Lake Shore-Railroad Company so used said right of way and said bridge, so constructed, until it transferred its road and other property to, and became consolidated with, the Chicago & West Michigan Railway Company, the defendant in this suit.

The bill further avers that said defendant proposes to erect [119]*119a new bridge over said canal, in place of tbe first one, constructed of iron; that defendant proposes to erect, for the support of the same, two large stone piers placed in the canal in such manner as to greatly impede the flow of water to complainant’s mills, thereby greatly injuring the complainant; that it would decrease the capacity of the canal about one-third, by leaving less than two-thirds pf the free space therein used for the passage of water and logs to the complainant’s mills.

The bill of complaint further avers—

That finally, and on the morning of Sunday, the twenty-fourth day of January, 1886, said railway company sent a force of from 75 to 100 men to Newaygo, and’ took forcible possession of the property of your orator, and imprisoned its night-watchman by it employed, and thus prevented an alarm being given; that they took possession of the saw-mill, planing-mill, and other factories belonging to your orator, and, blocking the large wheel of the planing-mill, opened the gates of same, took out the slash-boards from the waste-weir in the saw-mill, and endeavored to raise the gates in said mill; also went up to the head-gates of the canal, and, using lumber belonging to your orator, and large quantities of hay brought by themselves for that purpose, shut the water out of said canal, greatly endangering the same, and freezing up some of the wheels in said mill, and also the pump used for fire protection, thus endangering the entire property of your orator to destruction by fire; that, during this time, others, acting under like orders, commenced shoveling earth out of coffer-dams into the canal to prepare a foundation for said piers; that your orator, acting through its proper officers, has forbidden the prosecution of said work, and notified said men that it would defend its legal rights in the premises, and finally succeeded in securing a cessation of said work after one pile had been driven.”

At this time the railway company had sent a force of men with a pile-driver to drive piles for a foundation for said proposed piers in said canal.

Complainant further says:

Your orator is informed, through its said president and other officers, that said railway company has only suspended [120]*120work to arrange for a more powerful effort to renew and complete the same, and that it threatens to send a large force of men to Newaygo, and drive said piles in said canal, and erect said piers therein, in spite of all opposition; that, if said railway company is allowed to drive said piles in said canal, and erect said piers therein, your orator will sustain irreparable damage and loss, by being deprived of the free and unobstructed use of said canal for the flowage of water and floatage of saw-logs therein to its said mills and factories, and that the damages thus sustained will he incapable of full ascertainment in a suit at law, and that the wrong done will amount to a continuing trespass upon the rights of your orator; and that said Chicago & West Michigan Railway Company has no legal or equitable right to commit such acts, and thus injure and obstruct the business of your orator.”

The bill prays that—

“The Chicago &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.W. 910, 64 Mich. 114, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newaygo-manufacturing-co-v-chicago-west-michigan-railway-co-mich-1887.