Stone v. Roscommon Lumber Co.

26 N.W. 216, 59 Mich. 24, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 967
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 26 N.W. 216 (Stone v. Roscommon Lumber Co.) 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
Stone v. Roscommon Lumber Co., 26 N.W. 216, 59 Mich. 24, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 967 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

The defendants in this case appeal from a decree of the circuit court for the county of Roscommon, in [27]*27chancery, rendered on the seventh day of May, 1885, in-favor of the complainant. The bill is filed to perpetually enjoin the erection of a dam upon the Muskegon river, which is the outlet of Houghton lake. In the summer of 1874 the complainant purchased about 680 acres of land, situated upon and near the bank of Houghton lake, and not far from the river. The land was low, and mostly marsh, and was purchased by complainant with the view of making a hay farm of it. He alleges that he built a log house and made other improvements thereon, costing about $1,500. About Houghton lake, and the streams and smaller lakes connected therewith, is a large quantity of pine and other valuable timber, and the most convenient way to get the same to market after being cut is to float the logs, through the lake into, the river to its mouth at Lake Michigan. During the lower stages of water in the summer there was not sufficient depth to float the logs. In the latter part of 1874 and first part of 1875 the S. C. Hall Lumber Company erected .a dam on the river a short distance below its outlet from the lake, the object of which was to raise the water of the lake above its natural level. In the winter and spring of 1883, after the dam of 1874 had broken away and become worthless, the defendants began the erection of a new dam, to accomplish the same purpose as the old one, and the bill in this case was filed to enjoin the erection of their new dam. The bill was filed on the tenth day of April, 1883, and a preliminary injunction issued, which was served upon all the defendants. In disregard, however, of the order of the court, they went on and completed the dam.

The complainant claims that the dam caused the waters in the lake and river to rise, and overflow his said meadow lands, which he had improved and was improving for raising hay, and which would have been dry, and yielded him good crops but for the overflow complained of; that the injury to- his lands was irreparable, and damage great, and that he had no adequate remedy at law.

The defendants filed their joint and several answer to complainant’s bill, wherein they admit the lands of com[28]*28plainant are located, with reference to the lake, as stated in the bill, but deny that said lands are suitable for meadow, and aver that they are but a little above the surface of the lake when the waters are at their natural height, and that the lands are too low to ever be worth anything for meadow ; that the hay grown thereon is too coarse, and cannot be cured because of the surface waters, and that it would be impossible to produce good hay from the land without lowering the water in Houghton lake about two feet below the natural level, which would be so expensive as to render the undertaking impracticable. They further aver that the dam of 1873 has continued across the river until the present time, and that the attempted rebuilding was no more than repairing the dam first constructed, and that such repairing was done before complainant filed his bill in this case, and they deny that the dam raises the water in the lake so as to injure any of complainant’s land which would be otherwise suitable for the production of a hay crop. They also deny that the dam is any injury to plaintiff, or constitutes a nuisance or any irreparable injury. They admit that the dam was originally built without license or authority from complainant, but are informed it was licensed by the board of supervisors; and they aver that the complainant acquiesced in its continuance, and that complainant is estopped from complaining about the rebuilding or repairing of the dam. They admit the old dam was open at the time the bill was filed, and unused, and deny that the dam in its present condition will raise the waters in the lake. They further aver that the lumbering interest has increased to that extent that the dam becomes necessary in low water to float the logs over the bar at the outlet of the Muskegon, and that complainant has acquiesced in the continuance of the dam.

A large amount of testimony was taken upon both sides, and after a hearing upon the pleadings and proofs, the circuit court entered a decree, whereby it found the mischief complained of was established by the proofs, and was irreparable, and made the injunction in the case perpetual.

[29]*29We have not given a synopsis in full of the pleadings, but so much thereof as we deem necessary to a correct understanding of the case.

The principal questions presented in the record, and argued by the learned counsel upon the hearing, are the following:

(1) What was the character and condition of the land in question in 1874, when the complainant purchased it?

(2) Was it injured by the erection and maintenance of the first dam; and if so, the character and extent of that injury ?

(3) Is the present dam such an injury to the complainant' as to entitle him to the relief prayed for in his bill?

(4) Has there been any such acquiescence on the part of complainant as to estop him from claiming any redress, no matter how much he may have been injured, or is likely to be injured, by the dam in existence?

We shall not, in our discussion of the case, attempt a recapitulation of testimony given upon these various questions, but content ourselves with a statement of the conclusions we have reached, which we regard as supported by a preponderance of the evidence, and of the law which we deem applicable to the case.

The testimony on many of the questions presented in the record, given by the witnesses of the respective parties, differs very greatly, not only as to the facts, but still more widely when opinions are called for. Between fifteen and twenty witnesses were sworn as to the character and condition of the plaintiffs land from the time he made his purchase in 1874 down to the time of filing the bill in this cause — some of the testimony showing its condition as far back as 1862— and from this testimony it appears that, with the exception of about 100 acres, the land of complainant was from a foot to eighteen inches above the natural level of Houghton lake ; that much of it was liable to be overflowed by freshets in the spring and fall, but it was usually dry enough to produce a very fair quality of the coarser kinds of hay, such as blue joint, red top, and marsh hay, in the summer season ; that a large portion of it, with proper cultivation and improvement, could be brought into timothy grass; that several of these varieties of grass had been gathered for hay, from con[30]*30siderable portions of the land, for a number of years before ■the complainant made his purchase, and after that complainant improved about 150 acres of the marsh with satisfactory results, before the dam was built; and that all the marsh, ■except about 100 acres, was susceptible of such improvement.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W. 216, 59 Mich. 24, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-roscommon-lumber-co-mich-1886.