Pluchak v. Crawford

100 N.W. 765, 137 Mich. 509, 1904 Mich. LEXIS 603
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1904
DocketDocket No. 29
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 N.W. 765 (Pluchak v. Crawford) 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
Pluchak v. Crawford, 100 N.W. 765, 137 Mich. 509, 1904 Mich. LEXIS 603 (Mich. 1904).

Opinion

Moore, C. J.

The complainant is the owner of a steam sawmill on Devil’s creek. The defendants are owners of 40,000,000 feet of timber, which for three years they have been cutting and floating down said stream, using two dams for that purpose. They expect, according to their claim, to continue to cut and float down the stream logs cut from this timber at the rate of 2,000,000 feet a year. It is the claim of complainant that by the use of these dams his property is flooded so that 2£ feet of water stands upon the engine room floor of his mill, that the flooding continues so long the standing water kills his timber, and that he is deprived of the use of his mill for a considerable portion of the season. The complainant filed an injunction bill. The learned trial judge, in granting a decree for complainant, filed a written opinion, which represents clearly nearly all of the questions involved. The material parts of it read as follows:

“This cause was heard upon the pleadings and proofs taken before the circuit court commissioner, except that at the hearing the testimony of Frank Donnelly, Thomas Duncan, Frank Gerue, and John Murphy was taken in open court by consent of the solicitors for the respective parties.
“I have spent a good deal of time in the examination of the pleadings and evidence in the case. I shall only refer to such parts of the pleadings as are necessary to explain my conclusions. Neither do I deem it necessary to refer to the evidence at length. The parties were first before me soon after the bill was filed upon the motion of complainant for an injunction. The pleadings were then examined, and also numerous affidavits in support of the bill and answer. I made an order at that time that an injunction issue as prayed for unless the defendants should execute and deliver to complainant a bond in the sum of $1,000, with sureties to be approved by the register of the court, conditioned that said defendants would pay and perform any decree that might be entered in the . case. [511]*511The bond was given, and hence no injunction has ever been issued. Soon after, and on March 21, 1902, by virtue of a stipulation on file, complainant .amended his bill of complaint so as to include a claim for damages and an accounting for the alleged flooding of complainant’s said premises for the years 1900 and 1901, and the case has proceeded upon the claim for damages and an accounting for the three years of 1900, 1901, and 1902. The bill was filed primarily to restrain the defendants in the operation ■of certain dams in Devil’s creek, in Menominee county, to ■compel the abatement thereof, and to recover damages from defendants for the flooding of the complainant’s premises, as set forth in the bill. At the final hearing defendants’ solicitors asked leave to file an amended answer. This motion was made after the proofs had been closed. I will consider and dispose of the questions raised by counsel in the order in which they are presented in their briefs.
“1. The solicitors for the defendants raise the question and express doubt as to the jurisdiction of this court. In view of the Michigan decision cited by complainant’s solicitor in his brief, and especially in view of the two cases somewhat recently decided by this court and affirmed in the Supreme Court, there can, I think, be no serious doubt of the jurisdiction of the court. I refer to the cases of Michigan Land & Iron Co. v. Lumber Co., 109 Mich. 164 (66 N. W. 953), and Hall v. Nester, 122 Mich. 141 (80 N. W. 982). The principle that equity, having once acquired jurisdiction, will retain it, to give such full relief as will finally dispose of the controversy, is well settled in this State.
“2. As to defendants’ right to file an amended answer raising for the first time a prescriptive right in defendants to flow the complainant’s land, I am of opinion that it would be inequitable to allow the amendment to be made at this stage of the case. In defendants’ answer, which was sworn to, it is stated:
“ ‘That these defendants, nor any nor either of them, have never attempted to assume or exercise exclusive possession or control of the said Devil’s creek, or to exclude or prevent the complainant or any other person from banking, floating, and driving his or their saw logs in said creek in, through, and over the said dams of these defendants, and do not desire or intend to interfere with or exclude the complainant in any manner from the free enjoyment of said [512]*512Devil’s creek for the purpose of floating and driving his saw logs down the same.’ •
“Upon the issue framed upon this answer the complainant, and in fact both parties, proceeded to take a large amount of testimony before the commissioner, continuing-for many months, and involving a good deal of expensóte complainant. The proposed amended bill (answer) is wholly inconsistent with the position taken by the defendants in their original answer. As complainant’s solicitor well says:
“ ‘ One of the all-important elements of a prescriptive right or title is the adverse holding. A holding, to be adverse, must be distinct and hostile. The defendants now undertake to claim an easement in the complainant’s land. The owner of an easement in the land of another has a right therein which is paramount to the rights of the owner of the fee. It is a right which brooks no interference from any one. It is a right which necessarily interferes with the convenience of the owner of the servient estate whenever his convenience conflicts with that of the owner of the dominant estate. In-order to gain an easement by prescription, this hostility must have been maintained for the statutory period. ’
“ This is so inconsistent with and repugnant to the position taken by defendants in their sworn answer filed in the case, and upon which the issue was framed and the testimony taken, that to permit the proposed answer to be filed would be an injustice to the complainant. It would be such an entire change of position on the part of the defendants that it would be an abuse of discretion to permit the amendment. The case of Ogden v. Moore, 95 Mich. 290 (54 N. W. 899), although relating to amendments of a bill of complaint, applies as well to the answer as to the bill. But it is urged that the amendment should be allowed so that the pleadings may conform to the proof. I have carefully examined the testimony, and have been unable to find any evidence that would support the proposed answer in this respect. Even the testimony of John Murphy, especially when viewed in connection with, his affidavit on file in the case, fails to show any such actual, continued, visible, notorious, distinct, and hostile possession as would satisfy the rule relating to the establishment of a prescriptive right. If his testimony tends to establish any possession at all, it was a possession without any claim of right, and in no way hostile. The evidence is undisputed that the Spalding Lumber Company [513]*513put its drives through in such a short time that it did not materially injure the complainant. The evidence all tends to show that the damage complained of all occurred in the years 1900, 1901, and 1902. A prescriptive right can only be exercised in the manner and to the extent that it has been used during the whole prescriptive period. Chapel v. Smith, 80 Mich. 100 (45 N. W. 69); Osten v. Jerome, 93 Mich. 196 (53 N. W. 7).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Urban v. Doolan
276 N.W. 445 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1937)
Anderson v. Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Co.
179 N.W. 45 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)
Miller v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
135 P. 845 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1913)
In re Rogers' Estate
112 N.W. 931 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1907)
Reason v. Peters
112 N.W. 117 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.W. 765, 137 Mich. 509, 1904 Mich. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pluchak-v-crawford-mich-1904.