Pound v. Turck

95 U.S. 459, 24 L. Ed. 525, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2194
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1878
Docket125
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 95 U.S. 459 (Pound v. Turck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pound v. Turck, 95 U.S. 459, 24 L. Ed. 525, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2194 (1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court..

This suit, brought by Turck and Borland, assignees' in bankruptcy of French, Leonard, & Co., is founded upon allegations that the bankrupts, being lumbermen engaged in that business on the Chippewa River,-in Wisconsin, were seriously damaged' by the delay of a raft of lumber, shingles, and pickets, in said river, and by the breaking of the raft; all of which was attributable to obstructions placed in said river by Pound, Halbert, & Co., . the plaintiffs in error, who were defendants below. The defendants pleaded the general issue, and a verdict was rendered against thepi, on which the judgment was founded to which this writ óf error is taken". • '

The bill of exceptions is a very imperfect oné and two exceptions in regard to the admission of evidence are so unimportant that, we do not think it necessary to notice them further than to say that we see no error in them.

The bill of exceptions shows, however,, that there was evidence tending to prove that the dam and boom which constituted the principal obstruction .in the river, to which the loss .of plaintiffs’ assignees was due, were built under authority of an act of - the Wisconsin legislature ; to wit, c. 285, Session Laws of 1857, approved March 5 of that year.

This- statute is by its last section declared'fo be a public act, which shall be favorably construed in all courts.

*460 Sect. 7 of the act • authorizes “ the erection of one or more dams at. a given point across said river, and the building and maintaining of a boom or booms, with sufficient piers, and in such manner and form, and with such strength, as will stop and hold all logs and other things which may float in said river,'which boom or booms shall be so arranged as to permit the passage of boats at all times; and at times of running lumber, a' sufficient space shall be kept open in some convenient place for the passage of' rafts, and the said dam or dams shall be built with suitable slides for the running of - lumber in rafts over the same, and the said dam or dams and boom or booms shall' be so constructed as not to obstruct the running of lumber rafts in said river.” Private Laws of Wisconsin of 1857, p. 588.

The counsel for defendants seem to havé made aii attempt to secure from the court an instruction, that, if the injury to plaintiffs’ raft was caused by the boom or dam built under this statute, they were not liable if they constructed it in compliance with its demands'; - but. the language of the prayer alone is' too vague to predicate error, of its refusal. But the bill of exceptions proceeds to say, that, having refused these prayers, the court instructed - the jury upon those points as ■follows:.— ■ ' ' ,

1. That the defendants are not liable to private action for injuty to navigation-while * acting under legislative authority, provided-that they have kept within the authority granted, and have been guilty of fío negligence, unless their-, works materially" obstruct .the navigation of the river.

2. If-the defendants; in erecting the piers, and booms men-, tioned in the plaintiffs’ complaint, did so under authority given by the legislature of the State of Wisconsin, in which State the Chippewa River lies, and put therein in the manner provided by the act giving them authority, they are not liable in damages to the plaintiffs for any in jury,caused by reason of 'their doing the thing authorized.

3. If you find the stream.navigable within the rules I have laid down for determining that question,'you will next proceed to-determine whether the piers alleged and conceded to have been placed on the river at Chippewa Falls were a material *461 obstruction to tbe navigation thereof. If they were, the defendants had ho right to place- them there, nor could the legislature confer authority upon them to do so.'

If there were-no other Objection to these three propositions in the charge of the court, it appears to us that they must have been confusing to the minds of the jury. The first arid the third propositions distinctly enough declare that, if the piers and booms materially obstructed the navigation of the river, the act of the legislature was no protection; while the second as distinctly affirms that if they were built imthe manner provided by the act giving them authority, they are not liable for any injury arising from then! when so. built. As they appear to us, these propositions, given each as an independent one on that subject, are necessarily contradictory, and we cannot tell which of them the jury accepted as the foundation of their verdict. If the second proposition alone had been given, the only inquiry of the jury on that branch of the case would have been as to the conformity of the structures to the directions of the statute. If the other two were to govern, then.the jury must inquire whether those structures were a. material obstruction to the general navigation of the river. That these inquiries were not the same is very clear, for no one can read the statute without perceiving that it did authorize a. material obstruction to the general riavigation of the river.

It authorized the construction of dams entirely across the stream, and it authorized booms, with sufficient- piers, across the stream to stop and hold all logs and other things which may float in said river. It is a waste of words to attempt to prove that this would create a material obstruction 'to the navigation of the river by every species of water-craft.- The fact, that directions are given to facilitate the passage of these dams and piers by boats and rafts only shows that the evil caused by the obstructions was to be mitigated as far as possible consistently with their erection, and not that they were so to be built as to present no. material obstruction to navigation.

Taking all the instructions together, and in connection with^ the prayer of the defendants refused by the court, we are of *462 opinion that the jury must have understood that if the structures of defendants were a material obstruction to the general navigation of the river, the statute of the State afforded him no defence, though, they were built in strict conformity to its provisions. We are confirmed in the belief that we have correctly construed the language of the court by the argument of counsel in support • of the charge, which asserts the want of power in the State to pass the act here relied on. This was unquestionably the opinion of the court as given to the jury, arid its soundness is the principal matter to be considered by ns.

This want of power is supposed to vest on the repugnance of the statute to that provision of the Constitution which confers upon Congress the authority “ to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and.with the Indian tribes.” The proposition is not a new one in this court, and cannot be sustained as applicable to the case before us without overruling many well-considered decisions, no one of which has ever been overturned, though the doctrine announced has been occasionally questioned.

The Chippewa River is a small stream lying wholly within the State of Wisconsin, but emptying its waters into the Mississippi.

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Bluebook (online)
95 U.S. 459, 24 L. Ed. 525, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pound-v-turck-scotus-1878.