Northwestern Improvement & Boom Co. v. O'Brien

77 N.W. 989, 75 Minn. 335, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 24, 1899
DocketNos. 11,460—(253)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 989 (Northwestern Improvement & Boom Co. v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Improvement & Boom Co. v. O'Brien, 77 N.W. 989, 75 Minn. 335, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 479 (Mich. 1899).

Opinion

CANTY, J.

This is an appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it does not state' a cause of action. The complaint alleges: That during the times therein stated plaintiff was, and still is, a corporation organized

“For the purpose of improving the navigation of Kettle river for logs, lumber and timber from the north line of section twenty-six, in township forty-eight north, of range twenty west, to the mouth of said river, and a like improvement of Pine river, one of the tributaries of said Kettle river, from its source to the mouth thereof, including the building of such piers, booms, side rolling, sluicing and flooding dams, and other structures as may be necessary or advisable, in order to facilitate the driving, floating, holding, handling and assorting of logs, timber and lumber upon said Kettle river [337]*337and Pine river between the points hereinbefore mentioned'; also the clearing and straightening of the channel of said river between the points aforesaid, the booming or closing of sloughs adjacent thereto, or the clearing out or so improving the channel in any such slough as to render the same navigable, so as to improve and facilitate the navigation of said rivers.
“And that under and pursuant to its said organization this plaintiff, prior to the 1st day of April, A. D. 1892, had taken prior possession of that portion of said Kettle river between the north line of section twenty-six, in township forty-eight north, of range twenty west, to the mouth of said Kettle river, a distance of about seventy-five miles; and that at the time of taking such possession no other person or corporation was in possession thereof, or had erected or was in possession of any dams or other improvements upon said Kettle river between the points above described; and that at the time this plaintiff so took possession of said portion of said river above described, such portion of said river did require dams and improvements for the purpose of driving logs therein; and thereupon and prior to the 1st day of April, 1892, this plaintiff entered upon said Kettle river (between the points above described), and built thereon two certain dams, and had, by means of said dams and other improvements erected by it upon said river, so improved the navigation of said river as to render the driving of logs thereon reasonably practicable and certain.”

It is further alleged that during the driving season of 1892 defendant banked twenty-five million feet of saw logs above and below one of said dams,

“And that the said dams and other improvements so erected upon said river by this plaintiff were so managed, controlled and operated by this plaintiff during said year 1892 as to facilitate and aid in the driving of said logs, and to render the driving thereof in said year reasonably practicable and certain; and that a reasonable and just toll and compensation to this plaintiff for the use of said dam and improvements upon said river in said year 1892 is the sum of ten cents per thousand feet, board measure, for each and every thousand feet so owned or driven by said defendant upon said river in said year.”

There is also alleged a second cause of action, similar in form, covering the driving season of 1893, and a third cause of action, covering the driving season of 1894. There are two points made against this complaint.

1. Evidently this corporation was organized, or attempted to be [338]*338organized, under G. S. 1894, § 2633, which, so far as here material, reads as follows:

“Any corporation formed under this title in whole or in part for the improvement of any stream and driving logs therein, or for holding or handling logs therein, which shall have taken prior possession of such stream, or any considerable portion thereof, upon which portion no other person or corporation has erected any dams or other improvements, and which may have need of improvement for that purpose, shall have power to improve such streams and its tributaries by clearing and straightening the channels thereof, closing sloughs, erecting sluiceways, booms of all kinds, side rolling, sluicing and flooding dams or otherwise if necessary. * * * Every such corporation which shall so improve a stream and so keep in repair, and operate its works so as to render driving logs thereon reasonably practicable and certain, may charge and collect reasonable and uniform tolls upon all logs, lumber and timber driven, sluiced or floated on the same, and may take possession of all logs put into such stream or upon rollways, so as to impede 'the drive when the owners thereof or their agents shall not have come upon the stream adequately provided with men, teams and tools for breaking the rollways and driving such logs in season for making a thorough drive down such stream without hindering the main drive; and shall also, at the request of the owner of any logs and timber put into said streams, take charge of the same, and drive the same down and out of such stream, or down such stream so far as their improvements may extend, and charge and collect therefor of the owner or party controlling said logs and timber, reasonable charges and expenses for such services.”

It will be observed that this section requires the corporation to organize

“For the improvement of any stream and driving logs therein, or for holding or handling logs therein,”

While, as alleged in the complaint, this corporation was organized

“For the purpose of improving the navigation of Kettle river for logs, lumber and timber, * * * in order to facilitate the driving, floating, holding, handling and assorting of logs, timber and lumber upon said Kettle river.”

The point made is that it is nowhere alleged that the corporation was organized “for driving logs therein,” or for “handling logs therein,” and that being organized “to facilitate the driving, floating, holding, handling and assorting of logs” is not sufficient; that, [339]*339in order to have the right to collect tolls, the corporation must comply with the statute, and must, by its charter, have the power to drive or handle the logs on the improved portion of the river; and that it is not sufficient that such corporation has, by its charter, the power “to facilitate” the driving or handling of logs on such portion.

Said section 2633 provides that the corporation organized under that section “may take possession of all logs put into such stream,” where the owners of the logs are not sufficiently equipped to drive or handle them,

“And shall also, at the request of the owner of any logs and timber put into said streams, take charge of the same, and drive the same down and out of such stream.”

Then it is plain that, in order to organize a corporation under this section, the corporation must be given power to drive or handle logs as well as to make the improvements in the river. As a general rule, such improvements are made in portions of the river where, by reason of obstacles in the river, or otherwise, there is not sufficient water to float logs; and in order to handle the logs to the best advantage, and give every one a chance to bring his logs down the river, it is usually necessary that he who controls the flow of water and the use of the improvements should also drive or handle the logs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 989, 75 Minn. 335, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-improvement-boom-co-v-obrien-minn-1899.