Small v. Harrington

79 P. 461, 10 Idaho 499, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 59
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 79 P. 461 (Small v. Harrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Small v. Harrington, 79 P. 461, 10 Idaho 499, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 59 (Idaho 1904).

Opinion

STOCKSLAGER, J. —

On the twentieth day of March, 1903, respondents in this action filed a complaint in the district court of Nez Perce county against the appellants, setting out facts which, in the opinion of the district judge, warranted the issue of an injunction restraining certain acts until the further order of the court. Thereafter, and on the twenty-seventh day of March following, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint. The first paragraph alleges that plaintiffs aTe copartners, doing business at Lewiston, Idaho, under the firm name and style of Small & Emery and that they are engaged in the manufacture, wholesale and retail, of lumber, shingles, etc. Second: That since the twentieth day of August, 1896, plaintiffs have been in the active possession of and operating a sawmill, situated on the south shore of the Clearwater river at Lewiston, and that plaintiffs have operated said mill and are operating it for the purpose of manufacturing lumber and building material for wholesale and retail trade. That ever since said last mentioned dates plaintiffs have owned large quantities of logs on and along said river about eighty miles above plaintiffs’ said sawmill; that all logs sawed or manufactured into lumber'at said mill have been [procured on and along said river and its tributaries at points all the way from forty-five to eighty miles above the site of said mill. That the only means of transportation of logs to said mill is by floating them down said river in rafts or drives.

The third allegation is that the Clearwater river is a navigable stream and that the plaintiffs and the public generally from time immemorial have used the same for the purpose of driving and floating logs, rafts, etc., down the same; that it is usual every spring between the 10th of February and the 1st of .July for said stream to rise, caused by the melting snow in -the mountains. That it is impracticable and impossible to drive [503]*503or float rafts or drives of sawlogs from any point fifty miles above the site of said mill down said river only during the rise thereof. That plaintiffs have purchased and contracted about two million feet of logs to be floated down said stream and delivered at their said sawmill as soon as they can be delivered. That said timber last above mentioned is situated about fifty miles above said sawmill; that plaintiffs have purchased, and are now purchasing, divers other large quantities of sawlogs which they intend to float down said river when the spring rise comes. That defendants are operating, or claim to be operating a sawmill on the south shore of said Clearwater river about one-fourth mile above the site of plaintiff’s sawmill; that there is in said Clearwater river a certain island which commences at a point about a quarter of a mile above the sawmill of defendants and extends down said river to a point a short distance below the sawmill of plaintiffs. That the upper point of said island is very narrow for some distance, but that going down said river it gradually widens until it is about four hundred feet wide; that said upper point is about one hundred and fifty feet from the south shore of said river at and near the site of defendants’ sawmill; that the current of said river is divided at the upper point of said island, one part of said current or channel running and flowing along the south shore of said river and the other part of said current or channel flowing on the north side of said island; that in driving and floating rafts and drives of said logs and timbers down said river to the site of defendants’ said mill it is necessary that said sawlogs be floated in the channel or current on the south side of said island; that if said logs are permitted to get on the north side of said island, or in the current or channel on the north side of said island, they are carried down said Clearwater river beyond the site of plaintiff’s mill and into Snake river and become unmanageable and lost; that said defendants are proceeding to build, and are wrongfully and unlawfully building, a series of piers composed of large and divers quantities of piles of rock, stone and timber in said Clearwater river diagonally across the said south channel of said river from the site of defendants’ said mill to the point of said island where said [504]*504current or channel is divided by the point of said island, and give out and threaten that they will build and complete the said series of piers diagonally across said river in an upper direction to a point where said current or channel is divided and obstruct the passage of said south channel; that if said piers are completed and extended by defendants as aforesaid, said channel will be obstructed and it will be impossible to pass any raft or drive of logs or other crafts or deliver any logs brought down said river at the site of plaintiffs’ sawmill; that the building of said piers will obstruct the free passage and use of said channel, and the public generally will be prevented from freely using the same. That by reason of the plaintiffs being prevented from the use of' said channel 'by the construction of said piers they will suffer great and irreparable damage and injury; that when said plaintiffs come to float their said logs down said channel the said piers will cause said logs to be stranded thereon or will turn said logs into the north channel and cause them to be carried beyond plaintiff’s mill and into Snake river, and thereby cause the plaintiffs to lose the same and cause plaintiffs great damage in the sum of at least $12,000. That defendants will continue to construct the said piers unless restrained by the court; that they have already built seven piers in and across said channel or current as aforesaid; that said piers are at least twelve feet wide, and one of them at least one hundred feet long, and that all of said piers average about five feet in height — that is to say, five feet above the surface of. the water, and if said piers are completed said channel will be completely obstructed and it will be impossible to float or drive logs through the same.

The fourth allegation is that the Clearwater river at the point where the piers are being built is, and ever has been, navigable, and said south channel is, and ever has been, navigable, and that the public has used the same for passing, floating and driving rafts and drives of logs and other crafts down from time immemorial, and plaintiffs have used the same for said purposes ever since they first established their sawmill; that said south channel is the only way or means by which plaintiffs can transport, convey or- deliver logs at their said sawmill. That [505]*505at all times mentioned plaintiffs and tbe public have bad the right to use said channel, and that neither of said defendants have any right to obstruct the free passage of the same.

The fifth alleges the insolvency of defendants, and inability to respond in damages, and further alleges that defendants established their said mill and began the use of said south channel long subsequent to the time that plaintiffs began the operation of said mill and commenced the use of said Clearwater river, and further alleges that said defendants have committed a public nuisance by reason of their acts aforesaid.

Then follows prayer for injunction, restraining defendants from building, constructing, completing or continuing the said piers or otherwise obstructing the free passage or use of said river, and particularly the south channel or current thereof. That on final hearing the injunction be made perpetual. That the said nuisance be abated and that plaintiffs have their costs.

Defendants answering admit paragraph 1 of the complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P. 461, 10 Idaho 499, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-harrington-idaho-1904.