Woodin v. Wentworth

23 N.W. 813, 57 Mich. 278, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 783
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 N.W. 813 (Woodin v. Wentworth) 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
Woodin v. Wentworth, 23 N.W. 813, 57 Mich. 278, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 783 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

It appears from the record in this case, that, during the year 1882, the plaintiff was in possession of and used, and had for many years previous thereto, two mills in the township of Sherman, in Isabella county. These mills were run by water-power upon Chippewa river. One was a grist-mill and the other a saw-mill, and stood side by side, and were joined together, and located about nine miles below the junction of the north and south branches of the •Chippewa, which constitute the main stream. The defendants at the same time possessed and controlled a dam known as the “ Hudson Dam,” and banking ground for logs below the dam, where they were deposited in large quantities by •defendants; and this dam was used by them for the purpose of flooding the logs away from the banking ground, and running them to the jam below. The dam was sixteen miles, by the current of the stream, above the mills of the plaintiff, and located on the south branch. The plaintiff brought this suit against defendants for unlawfully holding back and diverting the waters of the river in the south branch, thereby preventing him from using his mills. The plaintiff in his declaration particularly sets out the wrong •complained of, and alleges that he was thereby deprived of the use of his mills and the profits thereof which he would have made if the waters of the Chippewa had not been diverted.

The defendants pleaded the general issue. The case was tried before "a jury, and upon the trial the plaintiff introduced testimony tending to show that after the middle of June •of each year logs could not be driven on the south branch «of the Chippewa river without the use of floods, and that [280]*280the defendants drove the logs so deposited by them on the banking ground above referred to by the use of floods from the Hudson'dam, and that the waters of the south branch ■were held back by means of the dam, and that floods were let off from the dam at intervals during the season of 1882, commencing in the latter par-t of June and lasting up to the first of December ; that by this use of the water the water was retained from the mills of plaintiff and let off in such a way that the plaintiff was deprived of the use of his mills during the season from the latter part of June.to the first of December; that during this time the plaintiff was so deprived of the use of the saw-mill entirely, and of the full use of the grist-mill a portion of the time, and that the irregular manner in which the defendants let off the water was the cause of the failure of the mill to be operated during those times.

There was no evidence that the defendants detained the water in any way other than by means, of the dam. The testimony of the plaintiff also showed, or tended to show, that the highest head of water that could be raised at any time in 1882 at the Hudson dam, and which was taken therefrom, was four feet two inches, and that during the summer of that year the usual head of water, when the sluice-gates-were shut, was two feet and six inches, and that after the-gates of the dam were opened, the pond on the Hudson dam-’ would be emptied in about three hours. And the plaintiff.’ also introduced testimony tending to show that the usual and! ordinary flow of the waters from the two branches of the-Chippewa referred to would furnish him with sufficient water with which to run his two mills to their full capacity during the entire season; that the waters of the north branch-were not sufficient for that purpose; that plaintiff called upon the defendants during the fall of 1S82 and told them-the injury they were doing him, and asked <them to stop-holding the water back, and that the' defendants refused this-request, and told plaintiff he could not have the water nor have any pay for it.

[281]*281Tlie defendants on their part introduced testimony tending to show that the waters from the north branch of the Chip pewa river were sufficient in volume to run the mills of plaintiff from the middle of June to the close of the season of 1882, and that the volume of water flowing into the plaintiff’s mill-pond, aside from what went into the same from the south branch of the Chippewa river, was sufficient to have enabled the plaintiff to have run and operated his mills con. tinuously during the time aforesaid without the aid of the water from the south branch of the Chippewa river; that the pond of the plaintiff covered from sixty to eighty acres, and in some places was about twelve feet deep ; that the greatest extent of pond caused by the detention of water at the Hudson dam by the head of four feet six inches would be from six to eight acres; that the sluice-boards in the dam, during the months of June, July, August and September, leaked so that about one-quarter of the natural volume of the water passed through ; that the use of the Hudson dam by the defendants did not interfere with or affect the head of water in the pond at the dam of plaintiff, and that the water of the south branch was not detained such length of time or in such manner as to affect the flow of water in the pond of plaintiff; that during the time in question there was a dam and mill between the forks of the Chippewa river and the mills of plaintiff, and also during the same time there was from five to seven million feet of logs in the channel of the stream, and that, by reason of the distance between the dam maintained by defendants and the mills of the plaintiff, and of the logs and other obstructions that were in the stream between the two, the water of the south branch flowed into the pond of the plaintiff in substantially its natural flow.

The jury, upon the evidence, and under the rulings and charge of the court, rendered their verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $766, and judgment was duly entered therefor. The defendants bring error.

A large number of exceptions were taken upon the trial, and to the charge and refusals to charge. As appears by briefs of counsel, the two main questions upon which a [282]*282,review of the case is desired by this Court are the following: First. Were the rulings and charge of the circuit judge correct as to the defendants’ right to hold the water back, as charged in the declaration % and second. If the jury found the facts to be as the plaintiff claimed them, was the rule of damages as laid down by the court correct, and could the plaintiff recover for the use of his mills, while idle, for the want of water wrongfully diverted by the defendants ?

For the purposes of this suit we must regard the testimony offered sufficient prima facie evidence that each party was the owner of the premises he occupied and used upon the stream. The record shows these parties proprietors on the same stream, and as such each has a right to a fair and reasonable participation in the use of its waters. This right the law will always protect, and when violated, will furnish the proper means of redress. This right is common to all proprietors, and an in jury to one, which is incident to the reasonable enjoyment of the common right by another, is not actionable. It is only the unreasonable use, detention or diversion of the water that is actionable. Dumont v. Kellogg 29 Mich. 420; Hoxsie v. Hoxsie 38 Mich. 80; Buchanan v. Grand River Log Co. 48 Mich. 367; Pettibone v. Maclem 45 Mich. 381; Pitts v. Lancaster Mills 13 Met. 156; Thunder Bay River Booming Co. v. Speechly 31 Mich. 336.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.W. 813, 57 Mich. 278, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodin-v-wentworth-mich-1885.