Northwestern Union Packet Co. v. Atlee

18 F. Cas. 405, 2 Dill. 479
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 405 (Northwestern Union Packet Co. v. Atlee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Union Packet Co. v. Atlee, 18 F. Cas. 405, 2 Dill. 479 (circtdia 1873).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

The respondent, who is an extensive manufacturer of lumber from logs, and the proprietor of land on the Mississippi river, upon which his saw mills are situate, the better to carry on his business erected the piers and boom mentioned in the statement of the case. This boom is several hundred foot in length, and is attached to two piers built in the river. The piers are twenty-five feet in height above the bed of the river, and a few feet in height above the surface of the water, and are in size twenty-nine feet by twenty-two feet. They are from [407]*407■one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet from the bank, the distance depending on the stage of water, and the water, even in a low stage, is twelve feet deep at the piers. Boats of the largest size, and at any stage of water, can pass inside of the piers if the way be not obstructed by logs or artificial erections.

The jurisdiction of the district court in admiralty of the case made by the libel, is settled by the supreme court of the United States, and need not be further noticed. 23 How. [64 U. S.] 209.

The right of the respondent to erect and maintain these piers, at the place, and under the circumstances, stated, presents the main question in the case, and it is a question of great importance. The court may properly take notice that a large portion of all the lumber which is supplied from the pine regions of Wisconsin and Minnesota is floated down the Mississippi in log rafts, which are owned by, or sold to. owners of mills located upon the banks of the river. It is the almost invariable practice of the mill owner to moor the logs in the stream in front of, or near, his mill, and the logs, in general, remain in the stream until they are taken therefrom, one by one. into the mill to be sawed.

The more effectually to secure or protect his logs, the respondent built the piers and boom in question. It is conceded that there is no statute of congress, or of the state, authorizing the erection. Its rightfulness depends, therefore, upon the general principles of the law. The respondent claims the right as riparian proprietor, and it follows, of course, that if he has the right, every other like proprietor has the same right.

Notwithstanding the able argument contained in the opinion of his honor in the court below, I have not been able to reach the conclusion that the right claimed for the respondent exists; and although, on a question of this kind, which he has so thoroughly considered, 1 may well distrust the correctness of my own views, still it is my duty to decide it according to my own judgment. It is not my purpose to enter upon any extended argument against the right which is set up by respondent, but only to indicate briefly the grounds of my opinion.

The paramount right attaching to the Mississippi river is the right to its free and unobstructed navigation. This is a public right. It exists in favor of the whole public, and for •all vessels, small as well as large, and for rafts equally with boats. Any erection or obstruction not authorized by competent legislative enactment, which materially interferes with the paramount right of navigation, is unlawful, and comes within the legal notion of a nuisance. The analogy between the river and a highway or street, as respects public rights, is very close. The river is a highway, or waterway, for the use of the public, just the same as a street or highway; and individuals, for their own convenience, have no more right, without legislative authority, to obstruct the one than they have to encumber or obstruct the other. Their rights in both cases are confined to a reasonable use of that which is common to all, and which may not be exclusively appropriated by any.

Telegraph poles, or gas posts, or market houses, in the public streets, are, or may be, convenient and useful, not only to individuals, but to the public; but if put there without legislative sanction, they are, in law, nuisances. And so with any unauthorized individual appropriation of any part of a street. Much more clearly would the law pronounce illegal any exclusive appropriation of a portion of the public way by individuals, for their own convenience, by erections or acts which would, or might, endanger the safety of the public.

The same principles apply to the rights of the public in the river. The adjacent owner may make a reasonable use of the river and the banks. He may, doubtless, land his rafts, and fasten them to the bank in front of his property. How long he might keep his logs stationary in the water, we need not inquire, for the injury to the libellant’s vessel wTas not caused by coming in contact with logs thus moored by the riparian proprietor, but by piers of solid masonry, built at a point which the evidence establishes to be within the navigable channel of the river, even at its lowest stage. No individual can, of his own motion, and for his own advantage, abridge or infringe the rights of the public in respect to the navigation of the river. A pier built within the navigable channel, that is, at a point in the river where vessels may go. and where they have the right to go, is an unlawful structure in the eye of the law. Indeed, any permanent structure which interferes with, or which may endanger or obstruct, navigation, is unlawful, and cannot be legalized by any considerations of utility, or otherwise, except by direct legislative authority.

Accordingly, it has been held that the erection and maintenance, without legislative permission, of a dam in the Wisconsin river, at a place where it is navigable in fact, is unlawful, whether it does or does not interfere with the navigation of the river. Wisconsin River Imp. Co. v. Lyons, 30 Wis. 61.

It is suggested that there is an analogy between piers like those erected by respondent and bridges across navigable streams. But, though bridges aeross such streams may be of great private convenience and public utility, still legislative sanction is necessary to legalize their existence.

Again, it is argued that the right of the respondent to build and maintain the piers in question rests, or may be rested, upon the same grounds upon which rests the right of the riparian proprietor to erect wharves and landing places for his own and the public use. Structures of the character just named, connected with the shore, when not [408]*408erected in violation of legislative regulations, when they do not obstruct the paramount right of navigation, and are not nuisances in fact, have the sanction of long usage in this country, and, under the qualifications suggested, may be lawfully erected; but the right, it is said, must be understood as terminating at the point of navigability. Dutton v. Strong. 1 Black [66 U. S.] 23, 32; Yates v. Milwaukee, 10 Wall. [77 U. S.] 497.

[NOTE. .An appeal was then taken to the supreme court, where the decree of this court was reversed, with instructions to render a decree on the basis of the commissioner's rejwrt. for half the damages which he found the libel-lants to have suffered. 21 Wall. (88 U. S.) 389.] NOTE. qA;s to obstructions in navigable rivers. Add. Tofts, p. 109. c. 4. § 1, and cases cited. Since the appeal in the foregoing case was taken. congress, on the 3d day of March. 1S73 (18 Sint. OOfil. authorized “the owners of saw mills on the Mississippi river, under the direction of the secretary of war.

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18 F. Cas. 405, 2 Dill. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-union-packet-co-v-atlee-circtdia-1873.